Public Hearing - March 1, 2023

                                                                       1

 1  BEFORE THE NEW YORK STATE SENATE FINANCE
    AND ASSEMBLY WAYS AND MEANS COMMITTEES
 2  ----------------------------------------------------

 3          JOINT LEGISLATIVE HEARING

 4             In the Matter of the
          2023-2024 EXECUTIVE BUDGET ON
 5            WORKFORCE DEVELOPMENT 
    
 6  ----------------------------------------------------

 7  
                                Hearing Room B
 8                              Legislative Office Building
                                Albany, New York 
 9  
                                March 1, 2023
10                              3:36 p.m.
    
11  
    
12  PRESIDING:

13            Senator Liz Krueger
              Chair, Senate Finance Committee
14  
              Assemblywoman Helene E. Weinstein
15            Chair, Assembly Ways & Means Committee
    
16  
    PRESENT:
17
              Senator Jack Martins
18            Senate Finance Committee (Acting RM)
    
19            Assemblyman Edward P. Ra 
              Assembly Ways & Means Committee (RM)
20  
              Senator Jessica Ramos
21            Chair, Senate Committee on Labor
    
22            Assemblywoman Latoya Joyner
              Chair, Assembly Committee on Labor
23  
              Senator Robert Jackson
24            Chair, Senate Committee on Civil Service
               and Pensions

                                                                   2

 1  2023-2024 Executive Budget
    Workforce Development
 2  3-1-23
    
 3  PRESENT:  (Continued)
    
 4            Assemblywoman Stacey Pheffer Amato 
              Chair, Assembly Committee on 
 5             Governmental Employees
    
 6            Senator Steven D. Rhoads
    
 7            Assemblyman Phil Steck
    
 8            Assemblyman Joe DeStefano
    
 9            Senator Shelley Mayer
    
10            Assemblyman Harry Bronson
    
11            Assemblywoman Jo Anne Simon
    
12            Senator Alexis Weik
    
13            Assemblyman Jonathan G. Jacobson
    
14            Assemblyman Billy Jones
    
15            Assemblywoman Nikki Lucas
    
16            Assemblyman Michael Durso
    
17            Assemblywoman Jodi Giglio
    
18            Assemblyman Robert Smullen
    
19            Senator Michelle Hinchey
    
20            Assemblywoman Rebecca A. Seawright
    
21            Assemblyman Juan Ardila
    
22            Assemblywoman Donna A. Lupardo
    
23            Assemblyman Matt Slater
    
24            Assemblywoman Gina L. Sillitti
    

                                                                   3

 1  2023-2024 Executive Budget
    Workforce Development
 2  3-1-23
    
 3  PRESENT:  (Continued)
    
 4            Assemblyman Brian Manktelow 
    
 5  
    
 6  
                       LIST OF SPEAKERS
 7  
                                          STATEMENT  QUESTIONS
 8  
    Roberta Reardon
 9  Commissioner
    Department of Labor                        
10       -and-
    Timothy Hogues
11  Commissioner
    NYS Department of 
12   Civil Service                           
         -and-
13  Michael N. Volforte 
    Director
14  NYS Office of 
     Employee Relations                       11        32
15  
    Edward Farrell
16  Executive Director 
    Retired Public Employees
17   Association                             
         -and-
18  Barbara Zaron
    President
19  Organization of NYS Management
     Confidential Employees (OMCE)         
20       -and-
    Joshua H. Terry 
21  Legislative Director 
    CSEA Local 1000, AFSCME
22       -and-
    Randi DiAntonio
23  Vice President
    NYS Public Employees 
24   Federation (PEF)                        169       183
    

                                                                   4

 1  2023-2024 Executive Budget
    Workforce Development
 2  3-1-23
    
 3                     LIST OF SPEAKERS, Continued 
    
 4                                        STATEMENT  QUESTION
    
 5  James A. Parrott, Ph.D.
    Director of Economic and
 6   Fiscal Policies
    Center for New York City 
 7   Affairs at The New School
         -and-
 8  Paul K. Sonn
    State Policy Program 
 9   Director
    National Employment Law
10   Project
         -and-
11  Hugh Baran
    Attorney
12  Kakalec Law LLC
         -for-
13  EmPIRE Coalition                        221       232
    
14  Tal Frieden
    Campaign Coordinator 
15   for Raise Up NY
    ALIGN
16       -and-
    Angeles Solis
17  Director of Worker 
     Organizing
18       -and-
    Lucas Sanchez
19  Co-Executive Director
    New York Communities 
20   for Change                             
         -and-
21  Adam Flint
    Director, Clean Energy Programs
22  Network for a Sustainable
     Tomorrow (NEST)
23  Convener, NYS Climate Education 
     and Clean Energy Careers 
24   Working Group                          257       270
    

                                                                   5

 1                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  I love that my 

 2           budget hearing introduction says "good 

 3           morning."  I think we'll skip that part.

 4                  But I do want to invite the first 

 5           panel of commissioners to come up to the 

 6           table, please.  And that would be, in case 

 7           you forgot who you were, Roberta Reardon, 

 8           Timothy Hogues, and Michael Volforte.  So 

 9           that would be Department of Labor, State 

10           Department of Civil Service, and Governor's 

11           Office of Employee Relations, if you'd all 

12           come up to the table.  Thank you.  

13                  Okay, let's just get rolling.  Okay, 

14           so let's try good afternoon, everyone.  I'm 

15           Liz Krueger, chair of the New York State 

16           Senate Finance Committee, and I'm cochairing 

17           today's budget hearing with my colleague and 

18           friend Helene Weinstein, from Assembly Ways 

19           and Means.  This is the last of 13 hearings 

20           conducted by the joint fiscal committees of 

21           the Legislature regarding the Governor's 

22           proposed budget for fiscal year '23-'24.  

23                  These hearings are conducted pursuant 

24           to the New York State Constitution and 


                                                                   6

 1           Legislative Law.  What's that noise I'm 

 2           hearing?

 3                  UNIDENTIFIED SPEAKER:  Duct tape.

 4                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Okay, fine, duct 

 5           tape.

 6                  UNIDENTIFIED SPEAKER:  Safety.  

 7           Safety.

 8                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  We're holding the 

 9           building together.  Thank you.

10                  (Laughter.)

11                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Today the Senate 

12           Finance Committee and Assembly Ways and Means 

13           Committee will hear testimony concerning the 

14           Governor's proposed budget for the New York 

15           State Department of Labor, the New York State 

16           Department of Civil Service, and the New York 

17           State Governor's Office of Employee 

18           Relations.  

19                  Following each person's testimony -- 

20           and that's 10 minutes each, for you three -- 

21           there will be some time for questions from 

22           the chairs of the fiscal committees and other 

23           related committees.  

24                  I will now introduce members of the 


                                                                   7

 1           Senate, and Assemblymember Helene Weinstein 

 2           will introduce members of the Assembly.  I'm 

 3           just quickly taking a look to see who's 

 4           joined us.  I see Senator Ramos, the chair of 

 5           Labor, Senator Shelley Mayer, Senator Jack 

 6           Martins, whose double role today is the 

 7           temporary ranker of Finance as well as the 

 8           ranker -- of Labor?  Of Labor, excellent.

 9                  And I'm going to turn it over to 

10           Helene to introduce Assemblymembers.

11                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you.  

12                  We have been joined by Assemblywoman 

13           Joyner, chair of our Labor Committee; 

14           Assemblywoman Pheffer Amato, chair of 

15           Government Employees; Assemblyman Jacobson, 

16           Assemblywoman Seawright, Assemblywoman Simon, 

17           Assemblywoman Zinerman.  

18                  And Assemblymember Ra, would you 

19           please -- our ranker, would you please 

20           introduce your colleagues?  

21                  ASSEMBLYMAN RA:  Thank you.  

22                  Good afternoon.  We're joined by 

23           Assemblyman DeStefano, our ranker on 

24           Government Employees, and Assemblymembers 


                                                                   8

 1           Giglio, Durso and Smullen.

 2                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  And I apologize, 

 3           I forgot to introduce Senator Weik, who is 

 4           the ranker for the Civil Service Committee.  

 5           I think now I have all the Senators.

 6                  I'm going to just go through some of 

 7           the basic rules we have for all hearings.  

 8           Sometimes they're actually followed.  Our 

 9           governmental witnesses get 10 minutes each to 

10           testify.  Our nongovernmental witnesses get 

11           three minutes each.

12                  For questions, Chairs Weinstein and 

13           Krueger and the relevant chairs of the 

14           committees get 10 minutes to ask questions of 

15           the government reps and three-minute 

16           follow-ups.  Rankers get five minutes, no 

17           second round.  All other members get three 

18           minutes, no second round.

19                  Then when we move to the 

20           nongovernmental panels, everyone's equal.  We 

21           only get three minutes to ask you questions 

22           and to get the answers.  

23                  It's important to highlight -- and 

24           this is for the legislators in the room -- 


                                                                   9

 1           when you have a clock in front of you and you 

 2           know you have three minutes or five minutes, 

 3           if you ask a question that takes two minutes 

 4           and 15 seconds or 4 minutes and 59 seconds, 

 5           you give your panel guests no time to answer 

 6           it.  That can be a problem.

 7                  You can say, This is too technical a 

 8           question, I hope you'll get back to us.  And 

 9           the answer is yes, please do get back to us 

10           in writing.  If you send the letters to 

11           Helene and myself, we will make sure that 

12           they are sent to all members of the relevant 

13           committees.  So regardless of who asked you 

14           the question, we'll all get the answer.  And 

15           we appreciate that.

16                  Okay, so please note the time limits 

17           do apply to the question and the answer in 

18           total.  When you see a clock, one minute 

19           before your time is up there will be a yellow 

20           light and a beep or -- a sound that goes off 

21           to let you know.

22                  Okay, I don't know that this will be 

23           an issue today, but we'll see.  So no 

24           PowerPoint presentations, no placards, no 


                                                                   10

 1           signs, no public demonstrations are allowed 

 2           during the hearing.

 3                  And with that, I would like to -- oh, 

 4           Helene has some additions.

 5                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  I just want to 

 6           acknowledge Assemblyman Bronson has joined us 

 7           also.

 8                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Great, thank you.

 9                  Okay.  With that, I think we'll just 

10           take you in the order you are on the agenda:  

11           Commissioner Reardon first, Commissioner 

12           Hogues second, and Michael Volforte, the 

13           director of the Governor's Office of Employee 

14           Relations.  So you each get 10 minutes.  You 

15           may have much more detailed legislation 

16           {sic}; highlight your bullet points, you only 

17           have 10 minutes.  And yes, every person who 

18           has submitted testimony for this hearing, 

19           whether they're testifying or not, that is 

20           available on the Senate website.  So you can 

21           look it up, legislators can look it up, and 

22           20 million New Yorkers can look it up if they 

23           like.  So we're trying to cut down on the 

24           number of trees we kill each hearing this 


                                                                   11

 1           year.

 2                  Okay.  And after everybody has 

 3           testified, then we will be able to start the 

 4           questions.

 5                  So Senator Reardon -- Senator Reardon?

 6                  (Laughter.)

 7                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  How about -- I 

 8           don't know, it's good, it's bad, it depends 

 9           on the day.  Commissioner Reardon.

10                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  I've been 

11           elevated.  Thank you.

12                  Chairs Krueger and Weinstein, 

13           distinguished members of the committees, 

14           thank you for this opportunity to talk about 

15           Governor Hochul's Executive Budget and to 

16           update you on our efforts at the Department 

17           of Labor.  

18                  I am Roberta Reardon.  I'm the 

19           commissioner of the New York State Department 

20           of Labor.  Our mission is transforming 

21           New York's world of work, which includes 

22           protecting workers, providing support to the 

23           unemployed, helping businesses thrive, and 

24           guiding New Yorkers into careers they love.  


                                                                   12

 1                  Our work is critically important to 

 2           New York State, and I am proud of the 

 3           milestones that we have achieved.  When the 

 4           pandemic hit, businesses statewide were 

 5           shuttered, everyone was home.  New Yorkers 

 6           were desperately searching for relief for 

 7           their families.  It was clear that our first 

 8           priority was to ensure that New Yorkers 

 9           received their Unemployment Insurance 

10           benefits quickly so they could feed and house 

11           their families.  

12                  The pandemic did not defeat us.  We 

13           overcame the hurdles, and I am so proud of 

14           not only what we've become, but what we are 

15           evolving into to better serve New Yorkers. 

16           There were many teachable moments during the 

17           pandemic, and we did not let a single one go 

18           to waste.  

19                  Perhaps the greatest challenge we 

20           faced during the crisis was new and novel 

21           forms of unemployment identity fraud.  What 

22           we experienced during the pandemic was 

23           extremely unusual and unlike anything seen 

24           before in our government's history.  There is 


                                                                   13

 1           a lack of understanding about what we were up 

 2           against at the time, and I want to clear up 

 3           any misconceptions.  

 4                  We, as a state, were a victim of 

 5           unemployment identity fraud.  Like every 

 6           state in the union, we were battered by 

 7           international cybercriminals.  All systems 

 8           nationwide were under attack.  This fraud was 

 9           so sophisticated that it literally tricked 

10           every system in the country.  

11                  Throughout the course of the pandemic, 

12           the department distributed over $105 billion 

13           in unemployment benefits to support nearly 

14           5 million New Yorkers.  We have identified 

15           $4 billion in unemployment fraud stolen by 

16           criminals during that time.  To be clear, any 

17           fraud is unacceptable.  But I want to give 

18           you more perspective about that figure.  It 

19           represents about 3.8 percent of what we paid 

20           in total to support New Yorkers.  

21                  We have since implemented many 

22           safeguards to protect our systems, including 

23           multifactor authentication, ID.me, 

24           cross-matching, and other measures to enhance 


                                                                   14

 1           security for our customers and prevent future 

 2           fraud.  We also continue to aggressively 

 3           pursue criminals to claw back stolen funds, 

 4           including half a billion dollars already 

 5           today.  By today, not today.  

 6                  While the pandemic was a turbulent 

 7           time, I am proud of the work the department 

 8           did to help New York families survive.  We 

 9           worked around the clock, side by side in the 

10           trenches during one of the most uncertain 

11           moments in U.S. history.  I remain forever 

12           grateful to my colleagues for their 

13           dedication and commitment to helping their 

14           fellow New Yorkers.  I also want to thank all 

15           of you and your staff for working so closely 

16           with us during the pandemic.  We simply could 

17           not have done it alone, and we appreciate 

18           your offices helping us during such a 

19           challenging time.  

20                  And while this was a pivotal chapter, 

21           it is not the end of our story.  This crisis 

22           does not define us as an agency.  We are so 

23           much more than that.  We have turned the 

24           page.  We are focused on the next chapter, 


                                                                   15

 1           and I know that it is one with a promising 

 2           future.  Thanks to the leadership of Governor 

 3           Hochul, and in partnership with the 

 4           Legislature, the Department of Labor has 

 5           harnessed the pandemic experience to 

 6           transform ourselves into a well-oiled, more 

 7           efficient, and better-prepared agency.  And 

 8           we are doing this with our core mission, to 

 9           protect workers, at the forefront of our 

10           minds.  

11                  In 2022, our Worker Protection and 

12           Labor Standards teams oversaw wage theft 

13           investigations that recovered $25 million in 

14           wages for nearly 18,000 workers.  Over the 

15           last decade, the team has recovered and 

16           dispersed around $360 million in stolen 

17           wages.  

18                  To help New Yorkers report labor 

19           violations and apply for permits, we launched 

20           a new case management system that will 

21           provide updates in real-time.  The system 

22           will also allow us to collect data, enhancing 

23           our ability to identify and respond to 

24           trends.  


                                                                   16

 1                  Ensuring workers receive a fair day's 

 2           pay for a fair day's work is a core tenet 

 3           that guides our work, which is why I approved 

 4           the Farm Laborers Wage Board's recommendation 

 5           to lower the overtime threshold for 

 6           farmworkers from 60 hours to 40 over a 

 7           10-year period.  The department also recently 

 8           oversaw a minimum wage increase to $14.20 an 

 9           hour for all upstate workers.  

10                  But we can do more.  We fully support 

11           Governor Hochul's plan to index minimum wage 

12           to inflation.  The plan will help low-wage 

13           New Yorkers meet the rising cost of living.  

14                  We continue to prioritize workforce 

15           development and find innovative ways to 

16           provide training opportunities and connect 

17           New Yorkers to careers they love.  An 

18           important part of this is meeting people 

19           where they are -- and these days, they're 

20           online.  And more than 200,000 New Yorkers 

21           utilized our virtual job services in 2022 

22           alone.  

23                  Last year we expanded our cutting-edge 

24           Virtual Career Center to all New Yorkers.  


                                                                   17

 1           The free platform caters the experience to 

 2           each customer's individual needs and allows 

 3           them to browse more than 250,000 job 

 4           postings.  

 5                  Businesses are also seeking rapid 

 6           online solutions to help fill jobs, a need 

 7           being met by our Virtual Career Fairs.  These 

 8           events are connecting businesses and 

 9           jobseekers virtually in real-time.  

10                  Registered Apprenticeships continue to 

11           give New Yorkers the skills they need to 

12           thrive in the economy.  In November, we 

13           celebrated the inaugural New York State 

14           Apprenticeship Month, which highlighted more 

15           than 900 critical programs across the state.  

16           Registered Apprenticeships are paying big 

17           dividends for businesses and New Yorkers, 

18           which is why we continue to expand these 

19           programs.  

20                  New York is currently undertaking an 

21           ambitious effort to address climate change.  

22           The clean energy sector is a game-changer for 

23           our planet and for New York's economy.  The 

24           department is helping to connect New Yorkers 


                                                                   18

 1           to green job opportunities by also ensuring 

 2           this burgeoning sector benefits all 

 3           communities equitably.  

 4                  And of course we remain focused on 

 5           assisting unemployed New Yorkers while also 

 6           keeping our systems secure.  We're more than 

 7           halfway into our four-year modernization plan 

 8           that will result in a completely new UI 

 9           management system, optimized to create a more 

10           seamless and secure user experience.  

11                  While we wholeheartedly welcome these 

12           technological advancements, we are also 

13           implementing other immediate improvements to 

14           our programs.  We are focused on reaching 

15           more New Yorkers and have ramped up language 

16           access.  A great example of this was the 

17           launch of our Spanish Facebook and Twitter 

18           accounts.  We also expanded our online 

19           virtual assistant, Perkins, to speak in 

20           13 languages and to perform several tasks 

21           that previously required speaking to an 

22           agent.  

23                  None of these changes would be 

24           possible without the steadfast support of 


                                                                   19

 1           Governor Hochul.  She continues to ensure the 

 2           department can modernize to provide the 

 3           resources New Yorkers and businesses need to 

 4           participate and thrive in today's economy.  

 5                  To further Governor Hochul’s 

 6           commitment to a transparent and open 

 7           government, the department held hearings to 

 8           receive public input on the state's newly 

 9           strengthened sexual harassment model policy, 

10           and on the impact of COVID-19 on women in the 

11           workforce and the gender wage gap.  That 

12           report will be released in just a few weeks.  

13                  The department is working smarter, but 

14           there is always room for improvement.  If we 

15           are to continue to keep our systems 

16           protected, we must evolve with the times. And 

17           you, our legislative partners, have played 

18           and continue to play critical roles in our 

19           efforts.  By investing continuously in 

20           modernization, we will ensure that our 

21           systems remain more efficient, easier to use, 

22           and safer than ever before for all 

23           New Yorkers. 

24                  Thank you.


                                                                   20

 1                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

 2                  Next, Commissioner Hogues.

 3                  COMMISSIONER HOGUES:  Thank you.  

 4                  Good afternoon, Chairs Krueger and 

 5           Weinstein and distinguished members of the 

 6           Senate Finance and Assembly Ways and Means 

 7           committees.  My name is Timothy Hogues, and 

 8           it is my privilege to serve as the 

 9           commissioner of the Department of 

10           Civil Service and the president of the 

11           Civil Service Commission.  

12                  I appreciate the opportunity to appear 

13           before you to comment on Governor Hochul's 

14           Executive Budget for fiscal year 2024, as 

15           well as to highlight some of our key 

16           accomplishments over the past year.

17                  During my short tenure as commissioner 

18           I have been struck by the dedication and 

19           unwavering commitment of New York State's 

20           public workforce.  State workers provide 

21           critical functions from transportation to 

22           public safety to healthcare that make the 

23           Empire State a great place to live, work and 

24           play.


                                                                   21

 1                  New York's public-sector workforce has 

 2           proven its dedication time and time again and 

 3           is always on the frontlines through public 

 4           emergencies, whether it be the COVID-19 

 5           pandemic or storm preparations and 

 6           recoveries.  

 7                  However, New York's workforce over 

 8           recent years has experienced a reduction in 

 9           size which has been especially evident in 

10           lower-level direct care and healthcare 

11           positions.  This year I am pleased to report 

12           that Governor Hochul's proposed budget will 

13           continue to provide healthcare and mental 

14           hygiene worker bonuses to incentivize and 

15           reward direct care frontline state employees 

16           through FY 2024, and provide critical 

17           investments to reinforce careers and public 

18           services across several agencies as part of 

19           our larger efforts to rebuild the state's 

20           workforce.

21                  The department is also implementing a 

22           Hiring for Emergency Limited Placement 

23           program to address the statewide workforce in 

24           critical health and safety titles.  The HELP 


                                                                   22

 1           program will temporarily waive the 

 2           civil service exam requirement for 

 3           approximately 100 direct-care, health and 

 4           safety titles across state government for a 

 5           12-month period and address staffing 

 6           emergencies now.

 7                  In addition, after hearing concerns 

 8           raised by the New York State Association of 

 9           Counties and the New York Conference of 

10           Mayors, the department's also implementing a 

11           similar program, the Local HELP program, to 

12           allow local civil service agencies to address 

13           the emergency staffing crises that they are 

14           also facing across health and safety 

15           positions.

16                  The department also recently 

17           transitioned some of our largest and most 

18           popular civil service examinations to an 

19           online format, allowing individuals to 

20           complete the exams wherever they have access 

21           to a computer.  These exams are also open 

22           over multiple weeks, increasing accessibility 

23           to interested candidates.  Utilizing this 

24           format, the department tested nearly 30,000 


                                                                   23

 1           candidates for nearly 200 job types in 2022.

 2                  Further, the department continues to 

 3           engage with agency partners to implement pay 

 4           increases and salary differentials for a 

 5           variety of titles, to improve recruitment and 

 6           retention efforts.  As part of these efforts, 

 7           the department completed a major 

 8           restructuring of nursing titles last year 

 9           that resulted in upgrades for most titles and 

10           higher starting salaries and salary 

11           differentials.

12                  Top of mind of all the efforts the 

13           department undertakes is ensuring diversity, 

14           inclusion, and equal opportunity are at the 

15           forefront of all statewide initiatives.  

16           Under Governor Hochul's guidance and 

17           leadership, and in partnership with the state 

18           chief diversity officer, chief disability 

19           officer and each individual state agency, the 

20           department is committed to building and 

21           sustaining a workforce and advancing programs 

22           and services that reflect the many unique 

23           faces, voices, backgrounds and ideas of those 

24           we serve.  


                                                                   24

 1                  While we've made tremendous progress 

 2           in 2022, I am extremely optimistic about the 

 3           progress we will make in years ahead with 

 4           Governor Hochul's ambitious vision to 

 5           reimagine and modernize the Department of 

 6           Civil Service.  

 7                  The Governor's Executive Budget 

 8           supports a new progressive and transformative 

 9           civil service examination model that includes 

10           administering continuous recruitment 

11           examinations at state-operated computer-based 

12           testing centers.  This model will allow the 

13           department to meet the increasing demand of 

14           examination services by expanding our 

15           capacity to hold more examinations and 

16           provide examination results to both state 

17           agencies and local civil service entities in 

18           a significantly compressed time frame.  

19                  The Executive Budget also allows the 

20           department to establish a greater presence at 

21           DOL Career Centers and meet job seekers where 

22           they are, fund a public awareness campaign to 

23           extol the values of public service, and 

24           support a comprehensive study to modernize 


                                                                   25

 1           the civil service pay structure.

 2                  In addition to all I have already 

 3           highlighted, the department continues to 

 4           implement effective strategies to responsibly 

 5           administer the New York State Health 

 6           Insurance Program to more than 1.2 million 

 7           members, ensuring access to high-quality 

 8           providers and services.

 9                  In 2022, New York State and CSEA came 

10           to a five-year contract agreement which 

11           included health benefit changes taking effect 

12           this July that will save the state, local 

13           governments, public authorities, and 

14           enrollees over $300 million annually.

15                  As you can see, the initiatives 

16           highlighted today reflect the department's 

17           commitment and focus to eliminating barriers 

18           to entry for civil service jobs, meeting job 

19           seekers where they are, and modernizing the 

20           state's approach to meeting our workforce 

21           needs.  The department's vision for the 

22           future is progressive and inclusive, and I 

23           look forward to working in partnership with 

24           all of you to bring this vision to fruition.  


                                                                   26

 1                  Thank you.

 2                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

 3                  And Director?

 4                  DIRECTOR VOLFORTE:  Thank you, 

 5           Chairs Weinstein and Krueger and honorable 

 6           members of the Assembly and Senate.  My name 

 7           is Michael Volforte, and I'm the director of 

 8           the New York State Office of Employee 

 9           Relations.  Thank you for the opportunity to 

10           speak with you about Governor Hochul's 

11           Executive Budget proposal for fiscal year 

12           2024 as it relates to our agency and the 

13           state workforce.

14                  The proposed budget continues 

15           Governor Hochul's goal of increasing the 

16           state workforce by proposing growth in a 

17           number of agencies, like the Division of 

18           State Police, Department of Environmental 

19           Conservation, and the Office of Parks, 

20           Recreation and Historic Preservation.  This 

21           year's budget also contains a number of 

22           civil service proposals to jump-start hiring 

23           for the future, like continuous recruitment 

24           examinations; establishing centers for 


                                                                   27

 1           careers in government, in partnership with 

 2           the Department of Labor; and a campaign 

 3           highlighting the importance of careers in 

 4           public service.

 5                  Together with our unions, we shape the 

 6           future of the workforce and efforts to retain 

 7           and expand it.  Over the past year we 

 8           successfully negotiated three collective 

 9           bargaining agreements covering employees 

10           represented by the Police Benevolent 

11           Association of New York State, Council 82, 

12           and the Civil Service Employees Association.  

13                  All agreements contained compensation 

14           increases in each year of the agreement.  The 

15           CSEA agreement not only provided increases 

16           but made changes to health insurance to 

17           encourage unit members to save money by using 

18           our broad participating provider network in 

19           the Empire Plan.  

20                  Between ongoing and planned 

21           negotiations, we will negotiate with nine 

22           unions this year for new collective 

23           bargaining agreements.  Our approach in 

24           negotiations will remain consistent with the 


                                                                   28

 1           Governor's message of being fair to employees 

 2           and ensuring that agencies are positioned to 

 3           continue to deliver outstanding service to 

 4           New Yorkers.  

 5                  Last year we continued to assist 

 6           agencies and employees in emerging from the 

 7           pandemic, and we continue offering such 

 8           services.  For example, we agreed with all of 

 9           the unions to extend the vacation accrual 

10           deadline until the end of 2023 to permit 

11           employees to take more time off.  We also 

12           assisted in the rollout of the $3,000 

13           healthcare worker bonus included in last 

14           year's budget for eligible private-sector and 

15           state employees.  As of today, this benefit 

16           has been extended to more than 39,000 state 

17           employees serving in a variety of roles in 

18           the healthcare and direct care fields.  These 

19           employees were critical in our efforts to 

20           manage and respond to COVID-19.  

21                  On a daily basis OER fields numerous 

22           inquiries from executive branch agencies.  We 

23           routinely dispense advice on the proper 

24           administration of our compensation and 


                                                                   29

 1           benefits packages as well as advice on 

 2           maximizing employee performance and 

 3           operational flexibility under the terms of 

 4           our negotiated agreements.  We also continue 

 5           to work to ensure that all complaints of 

 6           illegal discrimination and harassment are 

 7           properly investigated and addressed.  

 8                  As we indicated last year, agencies 

 9           have transitioned to their own telecommuting 

10           policies rather than the former emergency 

11           statewide telecommuting program.  Most allow 

12           telecommuting up to several days per pay 

13           period but require in-office presence the 

14           remainder of the pay period.  Our guidance to 

15           agencies has been consistent:  Telecommuting 

16           programs must strike a balance between 

17           providing a convenience to employees on one 

18           hand and maintaining accountability and 

19           robust services for New Yorkers on the other 

20           hand.  

21                  As you all know, our office offers a 

22           number of pre-tax programs for state 

23           employees that save employees by using 

24           pre-tax dollars for various healthcare, 


                                                                   30

 1           dependent care and transportation expenses.  

 2           Last year, there were over 26,000 enrollments 

 3           in the various programs.  We continue to make 

 4           our pre-tax program even more attractive by 

 5           allowing individuals to roll over the maximum 

 6           amount of 2022 funds into 2023 for the 

 7           Health Care Spending Account and provided a 

 8           grace period for our Dependent Care Advantage 

 9           Account and Adoption Expenses flexible 

10           spending accounts where employees can use 

11           their 2022 balance during the first two and 

12           half months of 2023 to incur new expenses and 

13           utilize previously deducted funds.  

14                  In collaboration with our union 

15           counterparts, we continued many other 

16           programs that provide important benefits to 

17           our workforce.  In the last year, our 

18           Employee Assistance Program provided 

19           assistance to almost 20,000 employees working 

20           and coping with the pandemic.  We also 

21           distributed over 4,500 job and career-related 

22           tuition reimbursement benefits in the last 

23           year and offer a WellNYS Everyday program.  

24                  Lastly, through our labor-management 


                                                                   31

 1           committees, we continue to foster and develop 

 2           the state's training and professional 

 3           development programs.  And in 2022, we 

 4           offered over 700 training and development 

 5           programs serving over 26,000 employees.  

 6                  As the Governor indicated in both the 

 7           State of the State and in her budget address, 

 8           the State is moving forward with paid 

 9           parental leave for New York State 

10           executive-branch employees.  Recently, our 

11           office partnered with the Department of 

12           Civil Service and implemented paid parental 

13           leave for unrepresented state employees.  

14           This leave will provide 12 weeks of leave at 

15           full pay for bonding with a child after the 

16           birth, adoption or foster care placement.  

17                  This benefit will provide much-needed 

18           time for new parents to bond with new family 

19           members without having to make undue 

20           financial sacrifices.  Our office will 

21           negotiate with each of the unions that 

22           represent our employees to extend this 

23           benefit to them.  

24                  In sum, while the current job market 


                                                                   32

 1           certainly poses challenges for the state, 

 2           under Governor Hochul's leadership our office 

 3           is well positioned to continue to deliver for 

 4           state agencies and employees alike so that 

 5           they can continue the essential services that 

 6           New Yorkers rely upon.

 7                  Thank you.

 8                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.  And 

 9           you win the prize -- six minutes to turn back 

10           over.  

11                  (Laughter.)

12                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Sorry.

13                  We've also been joined by Senator 

14           Jackson, who is the chair of Civil Services, 

15           and Senator Michelle Hinchey.  

16                  And are there Assemblymembers you'd 

17           like to name?  

18                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Yes.  We've 

19           been joined by Assemblyman Steck, 

20           Assemblywoman Lucas, Assemblyman Ardila, 

21           Assemblywoman Sillitti, and 

22           Assemblyman Jones.  And Assemblyman Slater.

23                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Great, thank you.  

24                  And we're going to start with 


                                                                   33

 1           questions from our Labor chair, 

 2           Senator Ramos.

 3                  SENATOR RAMOS:  All right.  Buenos 

 4           tardes.  Hi, Commissioner Reardon.

 5                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  Hi.

 6                  SENATOR RAMOS:  Good to see you.

 7                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  Thank you.

 8                  SENATOR RAMOS:  Let's start -- I want 

 9           to ask, you know, a few months ago the 

10           Governor had agreed to give healthcare 

11           workers a raise of $3 above the minimum wage, 

12           but now in this budget proposal she's taking 

13           it away.  What gives?

14                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  So they are 

15           getting the $3 above the minimum wage.  

16           They've gotten two already; they get the 

17           third dollars I think in October.  And I 

18           think what you're referring to is the 

19           indexing, which they are not included in.  

20                  I think the thinking there was this 

21           was a particular area that needed 

22           stabilization, and we wanted to make sure we 

23           had a steady pipeline of people coming into 

24           the home care field because it was very, very 


                                                                   34

 1           necessary.  And it has worked.  We have I 

 2           think a 33 percent increase in employment 

 3           there.

 4                  SENATOR RAMOS:  Why do we keep leaving 

 5           home care workers and other domestic worker 

 6           types outside of benefits that are given to 

 7           other workers?  Why are they less?

 8                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  So right now 

 9           they're ahead of everybody else.  They're $3 

10           above -- by October they'll be $3 above the 

11           minimum wage.  And if the indexing -- with 

12           the indexing they catch up with the minimum 

13           wage, then I think you'll have a conversation 

14           about whether or not it's time to increase 

15           that minimum wage again for that particular 

16           segment.  

17                  But they are right now above other 

18           workers --

19                  SENATOR RAMOS:  Well, I think the 

20           minimum wage should be increased for 

21           everyone.  And it actually concerns me to see 

22           that the Governor's proposal includes 

23           indexing without easing.  It also includes a 

24           cap at 3 percent and a bailout plan if 


                                                                   35

 1           unemployment U-3 goes up to 0.5 percent.  

 2                  You know, no other state has such a 

 3           cap, or any off-ramps.  Why should we?

 4                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  I believe other 

 5           states do have caps.  I don't know about the 

 6           off-ramps.  But --

 7                  SENATOR RAMOS:  What other states have 

 8           caps?

 9                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  I believe 

10           California does.  I'd have to check and get 

11           back to you.  I don't think we're the only 

12           one with a cap.  

13                  It's not the same number, but there is 

14           a cap.  But I can get back to you with that 

15           information.  I believe -- you know, we're 

16           very supportive of indexing the minimum wage.

17                  SENATOR RAMOS:  I appreciate that.  

18                  You know, by 2026 Washington, D.C. and 

19           Denver, their minimum wage is going to hit 

20           about $19.  San Francisco will be over $20.  

21           And Seattle will be at 21.  But under our 

22           Governor's proposal to raise the minimum 

23           wage, New York will only be at $16 by 2026.  

24           Do you think that's right?


                                                                   36

 1                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  I support the 

 2           Governor's plan, and obviously it's something 

 3           that the Governor and the Legislature will 

 4           have to work out together.  And whatever you 

 5           decide is the law I will happily enforce.

 6                  SENATOR RAMOS:  Okay.  Well, let's 

 7           move on to unemployment insurance.  You know, 

 8           Uber and Lyft still haven't paid their bill.  

 9           I asked this question at the budget hearing 

10           last year.  Right before the pandemic Uber 

11           and Lyft drivers were granted access to 

12           unemployment insurance and definitely used it 

13           during the pandemic.  At what point do we 

14           tabulate their bill and make them pay?

15                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  That is 

16           currently under -- it's in the legal courts, 

17           so I'm not going to be able to comment on any 

18           of that.

19                  SENATOR RAMOS:  Okay.  Would you agree 

20           that PUA served as a lifeline for workers 

21           throughout the pandemic?  Has the DOL done 

22           any research on its lasting effects?  

23                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  So PUA was 

24           created by the CARES Act, and Congress 


                                                                   37

 1           realized immediately with 1.9 -- well, in our 

 2           case, 1.9 million New Yorkers lost their jobs 

 3           in 60 days.  By the end of April we had 

 4           almost 2 million people on unemployment that 

 5           had not been on unemployment in February.  It 

 6           was an avalanche of need, and it went across 

 7           the entire state.  It didn't hit just a 

 8           certain kind of employee or nonemployee, you 

 9           know, the classification.  So the CARES Act 

10           carved out a new kind of aid for people who 

11           would not have been eligible otherwise.  And 

12           we supported that.

13                  SENATOR RAMOS:  You know what I'm 

14           getting at, right?  So folks who had been 

15           eligible for PUA now are left without a 

16           safety net because PUA has ended.  Right?

17                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  Yes.  Because 

18           they are not -- unless they are considered 

19           employees, they are not eligible for 

20           unemployment insurance.  It's a federal 

21           regulation.  

22                  SENATOR RAMOS:  Would you say that the 

23           Excluded Workers Fund was successful?

24                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  The Excluded 


                                                                   38

 1           Workers Fund was a very targeted fund and we 

 2           are very proud of the work we did, and have 

 3           distributed $2.1 billion to those 

 4           communities.

 5                  SENATOR RAMOS:  I thought it worked 

 6           very well, it just wasn't enough money.  We 

 7           need more money.  And so now in knowing and 

 8           learning our lessons from the pandemic, we're 

 9           trying to establish a more permanent fund 

10           with the unemployment bridge program that 

11           wouldn't only help those who were eligible 

12           for our Excluded Workers Fund but also those 

13           who had benefited from PUA.  

14                  I'm hoping that we can count on your 

15           support in that effort.

16                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  You know, it's 

17           an interesting conversation.  I haven't -- I 

18           don't comment on legislation.  I simply 

19           enforce it when it becomes the law.

20                  SENATOR RAMOS:  All right, so going 

21           back to UI specifically, what reform is being 

22           done to address the funding issue?  

23                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  You mean the 

24           state -- the state -- okay.  So that is a 


                                                                   39

 1           metric that's controlled by the federal 

 2           government and the state.  The federal 

 3           government has the FUTA bill that people are 

 4           getting now, and that is a regular payment to 

 5           restore the loan that went in to bail out 

 6           New York State because we had to pay out 

 7           benefits by federal regulation.  

 8                  There are three bills that businesses 

 9           get.  FUTA is paying off the loan.  The IAS 

10           is the interest assessment, and that is by 

11           New York's law, businesses are on the hook 

12           for that.  And then there's their regular 

13           bill, the bill is their experience rating 

14           that goes to pay for this year's benefits as 

15           well as restore the New York State Trust 

16           Fund.

17                  SENATOR RAMOS:  Mm-hmm.  Okay.  I want 

18           to ask about DOL enforcement.  I saw that in 

19           the budget proposal there is -- it includes 

20           an expansion for adding a few workers to the 

21           DOL, which is very exciting.  I'm thrilled.

22                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  Me too.

23                  SENATOR RAMOS:  What are they going to 

24           do?  


                                                                   40

 1                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  So we are busy 

 2           hiring.  Thank you to all of you for the $25 

 3           million we got in last year's budget.  We are 

 4           busy hiring people as we speak.  And thank 

 5           you to Civil Service for helping us in this 

 6           regard.  It has been a struggle sometimes.  

 7           And my fellow commissioner has helped smooth 

 8           out some of those problems.  

 9                  One thing everybody knows from your 

10           own constituents, hiring in this market is 

11           very tough.  And we are making sure that we 

12           reach into all the communities that we can to 

13           find the right people to do these jobs.  And 

14           we're training them up as fast as we can.  

15                  As of about this date, I think we have 

16           hired an additional -- it's over 1100 new 

17           employees over the last year.  So we are 

18           making great strides.

19                  SENATOR RAMOS:  How many in 

20           enforcement?  

21                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  I don't have 

22           that number in front of me.  I can get it to 

23           you.

24                  SENATOR RAMOS:  I mean, I would 


                                                                   41

 1           appreciate that.  I'm increasingly, you know, 

 2           concerned about the conditions we're hearing 

 3           at different workplaces, the wage theft that 

 4           continues to be rampant and has actually 

 5           tripled since before the pandemic.  And I 

 6           only say that because actually the money 

 7           that's been recovered has tripled, so I can 

 8           only imagine how much wage theft is actually 

 9           taking place.  And of course we want to make 

10           sure that we are helping all of those 

11           workers.  

12                  What else is needed here to further -- 

13           to help your enforcement efforts?

14                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  So I am open to 

15           any conversation that you want to have about 

16           how we do enforcement.  It is a very 

17           important part of what we do.  We are -- you 

18           know, one of the things we learned, one of 

19           the hard lessons we learned during the 

20           pandemic is you can't staff your way out of a 

21           crisis.  You need a lot of help, and a lot of 

22           that help is tech.  

23                  So we are -- we have rolled out new 

24           tools for our inspectors so they're not 


                                                                   42

 1           having to go back and write things on their 

 2           computers in their offices, they can do it in 

 3           the field.  It expedites their work.  

 4                  We have the new wage theft tip line 

 5           where workers can call into the tip line, 

 6           speak in 13 different languages, make their 

 7           report.  It goes right into the agency.  

 8                  SENATOR RAMOS:  Anybody actually visit 

 9           the businesses where we know wage theft tends 

10           to happen?  So for example, you know, we have 

11           the executive order from 2019 that did away 

12           with the tipped wage for nail salon workers 

13           and car wash workers and others.  But does 

14           anybody actually go to every car wash to make 

15           sure that the $15 at least are being paid --

16                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  We are a 

17           tip-driven agency --

18                  SENATOR RAMOS:  -- nail salon workers?

19                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  -- so no, we do 

20           not visit individual -- we don't do sweeps, 

21           like that.  But we follow up every tip that's 

22           given to us.

23                  SENATOR RAMOS:  Okay.  Well, I -- it's 

24           an increasing concern to me.  I even hear of 


                                                                   43

 1           human trafficking stories having to do 

 2           particularly with nail salons --

 3                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  Yes.  And we 

 4           follow up -- we have a whole unit that works 

 5           on that.  It's a tragic part of our world and 

 6           it has obviously grown during the pandemic.  

 7           And it has also grown with new people coming 

 8           into the country who are very, very 

 9           vulnerable.

10                  SENATOR RAMOS:  Yes.  I mean, in fact, 

11           I think it was in Lewisville, New York, 

12           upstate, where recently -- and I spoke to the 

13           head of NYSERDA about this -- where we saw a 

14           huge car accident where six migrant workers 

15           were killed on their way, I believe on a 

16           Sunday, to go work and install solar panel 

17           equipment.  So that's of deep concern to me.

18                  Anyway, thank you, and thank you for 

19           your work with the Farmworker Wage Board.  I 

20           appreciate it.

21                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  Thank you.

22                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

23                  Assembly.  

24                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  We go to the 


                                                                   44

 1           chair of our Labor Committee, Assemblywoman 

 2           Joyner.

 3                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JOYNER:  Thank you so 

 4           much.  

 5                  Okay, so I have a couple of questions.  

 6           I'm going to first start with the first topic 

 7           on unemployment insurance --

 8                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Ten minutes on 

 9           the clock, please.

10                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JOYNER:  Okay, the 

11           clock, reset the clock.  Okay, I have ten 

12           seconds of Senator Ramos's time.  

13                  We'll start first with workers and 

14           employers.  As you know, both have been 

15           negatively impacted by flaws in the UI 

16           system.  So I'll first start with workers 

17           with regards to fraud.  We've heard stories 

18           of claimants who have been victims of 

19           identity fraud or being locked out of ID.me.  

20                  I wanted to know, first, what measures 

21           has the department been using to prevent UI 

22           fraud and ensure that workers are obtaining 

23           much-needed benefits?  

24                  And the other issue that is greatly 


                                                                   45

 1           impacting workers is the overpayment issue.  

 2           The federal government has made it clear that 

 3           it does not want money back that -- and it 

 4           has authorized states to waive overpayments.  

 5           So my question is simply, why hasn't the 

 6           state waived overpayments?  And how has the 

 7           process for giving notifications and waivers 

 8           for overpayments been made to claimants who 

 9           receive these overpayments at no fault of 

10           their own?  

11                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  So let me start 

12           with the overpayments.  We are -- people have 

13           the opportunity to apply for a waiver, and we 

14           are reviewing them quickly.  It's not a long 

15           process.  And a large, large, large percent 

16           of them are given the waiver.  

17                  So there is an urban myth out there 

18           that we not doing overpayment waivers.  

19           That's not true.  We have actually applied to 

20           the federal government for blanket waivers.  

21           We have not received any confirmation back, 

22           so I don't know what the status of that is.  

23                  But if you are a victim of 

24           overpayment, you can apply for a waiver.  And 


                                                                   46

 1           it's generally on equity and good conscience.  

 2           It is a pretty streamlined process now, and 

 3           people get their answers usually within two 

 4           weeks.  So they should -- if they feel that 

 5           they are being asked for something they 

 6           shouldn't be asked for, they should 

 7           absolutely go on the website and do it.  We 

 8           have a lot, a lot of public comment, you 

 9           know, social media, we sent -- we sent 125 

10           million emails and texts to our customers 

11           during the pandemic.  This was one of the 

12           things that we texted and emailed about.  

13                  The word is out there.  If people 

14           don't know, I'm happy to increase that kind 

15           of communication.  But it is absolutely -- 

16           you know, we are granting these waivers at a 

17           pretty rapid clip.  

18                  ID.me.  Nobody should be locked out of 

19           ID.me.  If people are having trouble with it, 

20           there are other ways for people to confirm 

21           their identity.  Again, we streamlined that.  

22           When we first set it up there was confusion; 

23           nobody had ever seen this before.  But -- and 

24           we understand there are populations who don't 


                                                                   47

 1           have the technology or they may not be 

 2           comfortable with the technology, or there may 

 3           be a language issue.  So we have got 

 4           different workarounds.  Nobody should ever be 

 5           denied their benefits because they can't 

 6           handle ID.me.  

 7                  However, ID.me was the single 

 8           strongest weapon that we had to shut down the 

 9           international cybercriminals who had stolen 

10           people's identities across the state.  And 

11           without it, we would be awash in more fraud.  

12           We can look at the numbers and see, as soon 

13           as ID.me came in, the fraud numbers began to 

14           trickle down.  And I'm glad we have it.

15                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JOYNER:  Okay, so my 

16           next question is with respect to the impact 

17           on employers.  As you know, many employers 

18           are paying down the UI Trust Fund debt.  

19                  When will they expect to see a 

20           decrease in their contribution rates?  I know 

21           that the numbers shared by DOL projected a 

22           repayment schedule of a five to six year 

23           timeline.  Is that still accurate?  Are we 

24           still on schedule?  And does the department 


                                                                   48

 1           have projections as to what employers' 

 2           contribution rates will be during that 

 3           repayment schedule?  

 4                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  We do have 

 5           projections.  I don't have them in front of 

 6           me.  I can get them to you.  

 7                  The FUTA tax -- the FUTA -- it's not 

 8           a -- the FUTA, it's the Federal Unemployment 

 9           Tax Act, dictates what the state businesses 

10           have to pay to pay down the balance of the 

11           debt.  We had to borrow money from the 

12           federal government.  That is a federal law.  

13           We cannot not pay UI benefits.  So that's 

14           what that is, and it's on a steady track.  

15           It's to make sure that steady payments are 

16           made into the system on a regular basis.

17                  I can get you the rates.  They know 

18           them; I don't have them memorized.  But it is 

19           five or six years, and then we will be out of 

20           that situation.

21                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JOYNER:  Okay.  And I 

22           know we've already paid off a billion.  Will 

23           rates decrease as the deficit also decreases?  

24                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  So the rates -- 


                                                                   49

 1           remember, we have three different things that 

 2           people are paying on.  The FUTA rate is set 

 3           by the federal government.  This year and 

 4           next year, it's the same.  It probably does 

 5           go down, but I don't know.  Let me find out 

 6           for you for sure.  

 7                  But also when people say rates, 

 8           they're thinking about their individual UI 

 9           bill that they pay every year.  That is based 

10           on your experience rating -- you know, how 

11           many people have left your employment, you 

12           know, not of their own volition.  I'll remind 

13           everybody that during '20 and '21 we forgave, 

14           we forebeared any experience rating on 

15           businesses.  They did not pay -- everybody 

16           had people on unemployment because the 

17           businesses were shut down.  They didn't do it 

18           voluntarily.  So we didn't assess anybody an 

19           experience rating in those years.  

20                  We know by our calculations that in 

21           those three years, counting this year, each 

22           business was saved approximately 800 and I 

23           think 32 dollars per employee.  So in those 

24           three years we actually saved businesses 


                                                                   50

 1           money by not dinging them on the experience 

 2           rating.

 3                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JOYNER:  Okay, the next 

 4           question I have is regarding partial UI.  I 

 5           know in your testimony you mentioned the 

 6           four-year UI modernization plan that you are 

 7           implementing.  We gave an extension of one 

 8           year in last year's budget.  And simply -- I 

 9           was told I need a yes or no response -- is 

10           DOL prepared to implement this partial UI 

11           system and to -- when is the department 

12           expected to complete and implement this 

13           modernization?  

14                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  Well, people 

15           can get partial UI right now.  It's not being 

16           denied to anybody.  It's just more of an 

17           onerous thing for us to do.  It's not online 

18           because it's not in the system.  

19                  If we were to put it into the old 

20           system right now, we would have to stop the 

21           modernization for a significant period of 

22           time to put a patch on an old system that 

23           would stop as soon as modernization came in.  

24           It just doesn't make sense.  So -- and we've 


                                                                   51

 1           spoken about this freely.  We've sent 

 2           letters.  It's not a secret.  You can get 

 3           partial UI right now.  It just takes more 

 4           time for us to do that because it's not 

 5           automated.  

 6                  But as modernization rolls out, that 

 7           is definitely going to be part of the mod, 

 8           and it will be an entirely different system.  

 9           I am very fond of partial UI.  I think it 

10           helps workers.  But right now we can't 

11           automate it because we are in the middle of 

12           modernizing our ancient COBOL system.

13                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JOYNER:  Okay.  My next 

14           question is regarding agency operations.  We 

15           know that DOL needs staff.  There's a lot of 

16           enforcement activities that need the 

17           attention of DOL staff.  In last year's 

18           budget we allocated an additional $24.6 

19           million to support the agency.  However, 

20           we've been seeing an alarming decline in 

21           staff members.  We see a drop in the number 

22           of full-time staff and an increase in 

23           provisional and temp workers.  

24                  How can you assure us that we will see 


                                                                   52

 1           an expanded oversight and enforcement of the 

 2           state labor laws?  And also what is being 

 3           done to on-board and train provisional and 

 4           temporary workers?  

 5                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  So I'm not sure 

 6           where the information came from, but we have 

 7           been working very, very seriously to 

 8           transition our provisional and, you know, 

 9           temporary workers into full-time status as 

10           quickly as possible.  Some of that involves 

11           my friend Tim's, you know, tests.  They have 

12           to -- some of the civil service, they have to 

13           take the test and be available for that 

14           position.  

15                  But we're working very hard, we're 

16           working very closely with our unions to make 

17           sure that we can move those people as quickly 

18           as possible, because we value them as 

19           full-time employees as well.  

20                  So I don't think we are seeing a 

21           diminution of full-time workers, we are 

22           actually trying to reduce the number of 

23           part-time workers or temporary workers, 

24           so-called.


                                                                   53

 1                  We have -- as I said earlier, we've 

 2           hired over a thousand new employees and we 

 3           are looking for more.  And, you know, we are 

 4           very thankful for the $25 million that you 

 5           gave us last year.  We are using it to the 

 6           best of our ability.  Again, as everybody 

 7           knows from your business colleagues, hiring 

 8           is tough in this market.  But we are making a 

 9           concerted effort because we want the best 

10           people doing this work for the state.

11                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JOYNER:  Okay, yes.  The 

12           data that we were provided, it's showing an 

13           increase in provisional and temp workers from 

14           1 percent to 10 percent.  

15                  My next question is regarding 

16           workforce development programs and funds.  In 

17           2018 we enacted legislation that would 

18           require DOL to create an online database 

19           containing workforce development training 

20           programs in New York State.  What's been the 

21           status of this database?  When can we expect 

22           it to be available on the DOL website?  

23                  And the second question regarding 

24           workforce development is, you know, we see 


                                                                   54

 1           that it's difficult to help underserved 

 2           communities become aware of different job 

 3           opportunities, so what can be done better to 

 4           serve these populations?

 5                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  So you are 

 6           actually talking about -- I'll take the 

 7           second question first.  Reaching into 

 8           underserved communities is a really important 

 9           piece of what I think we do, and we're really 

10           upping our game.  One of the things that I 

11           insist on -- two things.  We meet our 

12           customers where they are.  We are no longer 

13           going to have a system where you need to fit 

14           into a box of some kind in order to get our 

15           services.  

16                  I don't care what language you speak, 

17           I don't care what religion you observe, I 

18           don't care what part of the state you live 

19           in -- none of that matters.  I want to help 

20           New Yorkers find careers they love and be 

21           successful.  So we are very focused on that.  

22           We have a lot of language access.  We do a 

23           lot of work in communities.  We've started 

24           out-stationing our senior staff in DUES, in 


                                                                   55

 1           the workforce development part, and they're 

 2           going out into our various Career Centers for 

 3           several days at a time to sit with the 

 4           community and understand what the issues are 

 5           in those communities so we can better refine 

 6           our processes.

 7                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JOYNER:  And we have 

 8           15 seconds, so if you can get to the other --

 9                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  The database.

10                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JOYNER:  Yes.

11                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  It's up and 

12           it's running.  It's been up since last year.

13                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JOYNER:  Okay, great.  

14           Thank you.

15                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  To the Senate.  

16                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.  

17                  And we have our chair, Robert Jackson, 

18           for Civil Service, 10 minutes on the clock.

19                  SENATOR JACKSON:  Sure, thank you.  

20                  So I was going to say good evening, 

21           but good afternoon.  So let me thank you all 

22           for coming.  And obviously this is very 

23           important for the people of New York State.  

24                  So I guess my first question to you, 


                                                                   56

 1           Commissioner, Department of Labor, can you 

 2           tell us where we are in upgrading the system 

 3           so that we can stop as much of the fraud that 

 4           allegedly has occurred in the past?

 5                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  During the 

 6           height of the pandemic -- actually, the very 

 7           beginning of the pandemic, we began to 

 8           realize that there was a new kind of fraud 

 9           that was hitting our system, one that we had 

10           never had before.  And this was identity 

11           fraud, and it was done by international 

12           cyber-rings, and they had people's personal 

13           identifications -- your name, your Social 

14           Security number, your address, your last 

15           employer, perhaps your salary range.  Your 

16           claim looked like a real claim to our system.  

17                  So that presented a huge hurdle for us 

18           to figure out how to stop it.  We worked with 

19           other states, we worked with the federal 

20           government.  We quickly realized we needed 

21           technology, so we worked with Google and 

22           other places to figure out ways that we could 

23           do better geofencing and matching and the 

24           kinds of things that we did.  


                                                                   57

 1                  The problem with the CARES package was 

 2           they intentionally reduced the eligibility 

 3           criteria for people who were eligible for 

 4           those new federal programs.  The first year 

 5           of PUA, all you had to do essentially was 

 6           check a box that said "I was unemployed by 

 7           the pandemic," and you were eligible.  We had 

 8           no employer to talk to, we had no wage 

 9           records to pull -- this was how we usually 

10           verified claims.  

11                  At the end of that year, the federal 

12           government changed the requirements, and 

13           that's why people then had to send in more 

14           proof of employment.  But that first year we 

15           had over $300 million a month going out the 

16           door in fraud because it was so easy to do.

17                  We now have ID.me.  The minute we got 

18           ID.me up and running, fraud began to decline.  

19           We then -- about six or eight months later, 

20           we got multifactor authentication.  Again, 

21           fraud immediately began to come down.  

22                  We have other very sophisticated 

23           systems that I won't talk about in public 

24           because I don't want to tell them what we 


                                                                   58

 1           have, but it really began to reduce the 

 2           fraud.  In 2022 we paid out $2.5 billion in 

 3           benefits.  We only lost $388,000 to fraud.  

 4           So you can see the third year, without the 

 5           federal benefits and with all the other stuff 

 6           we were able to put on the system, we've 

 7           tightened it up a lot.  

 8                  There's always fraud.  It's always a 

 9           problem.  But we are on top of it, and the 

10           modernization system will be even better.  

11           And please, I can't wait for modernization to 

12           come on board.  Probably more than you.

13                  SENATOR JACKSON:  Thank you.  

14                  So my next question is for Michael 

15           Volforte, the head of the GOER.  You 

16           indicated the labor agreements that you've 

17           reached with -- do we have state labor unions 

18           that have not reached agreement and have 

19           expired contracts?  And where are you at in 

20           trying to move those contracts?  

21                  DIRECTOR VOLFORTE:  We currently have 

22           one union that has an expired contract, and 

23           we're in active negotiations with them.

24                  The remaining unions either have 


                                                                   59

 1           contracts that expire this year or years into 

 2           the future, and we're engaged with a number 

 3           of those unions where we're actually starting 

 4           negotiations in advance of expiration and 

 5           hope to reach agreement over the coming 

 6           months with a number of those unions.

 7                  SENATOR JACKSON:  So one of the things 

 8           that I hear about state service is it takes 

 9           too long to get things done.  So do you have 

10           enough staff to move contracts where we're 

11           not dealing with contracts that have expired?  

12           People get a little frustrated when things 

13           are taking so long to get things done.

14                  DIRECTOR VOLFORTE:  We believe we have 

15           enough staff to deliver on negotiating 

16           contracts.  

17                  I would simply say that when contracts 

18           settle, it isn't always a function of 

19           necessarily one side or the other.  You know, 

20           sometimes there's a lot of issues that come 

21           up and negotiations don't always start before 

22           they expire.  Sometimes negotiation start 

23           afterwards.  So it's not entirely consistent 

24           that things get delayed because negotiations 


                                                                   60

 1           start at a point in time, because that's 

 2           really dependent on the parties agreeing when 

 3           they start.  

 4                  So it's not always the case that 

 5           there's delays because of staffing or other 

 6           things.  Sometimes there are choices made in 

 7           terms of when timing starts for negotiations.

 8                  SENATOR JACKSON:  Okay, now my next 

 9           question is for Commissioner Hogues.  

10                  Congratulations on your appointment as 

11           commissioner.

12                  COMMISSIONER HOGUES:  Thank you.

13                  SENATOR JACKSON:  So I'm talking to a 

14           lot of labor unions, obviously; I chair the 

15           Civil Service and Pensions Committee.  And so 

16           they talk about that it takes too long to 

17           move in order to get people appointed.  

18                  So what have you done so far in order 

19           to modernize the civil service system as far 

20           as pay structure and as far as examinations 

21           and things like that?

22                  COMMISSIONER HOGUES:  So thank you.  

23                  So I believe throughout this testimony 

24           you heard a lot about modernization, and so 


                                                                   61

 1           Civil Service is taking that same approach to 

 2           figure out how we can deliver, test more 

 3           efficiently and effectively, and get the 

 4           results in a condensed time frame.  

 5                  And so one of those tools that is in 

 6           our proposal is a continuous recruitment 

 7           proposal that allows for us to offer tests on 

 8           a regular basis and for those eligibility 

 9           lists to be refreshed on a regular basis so 

10           that agencies have access to that.

11                  We also are on the technology front to 

12           offer exams online.  We've transferred some 

13           of our most popular exams from in-person, 

14           filling out the bubbles, to an online 

15           training-and-experience-type exam which has 

16           allowed us to serve a lot of individuals in a 

17           condensed time frame and more 

18           cost-effectively as well.

19                  SENATOR JACKSON:  And in speaking with 

20           the various unions, the continuous 

21           recruitment process and examinations so that 

22           you don't have to schedule an exam and people 

23           have to wait for the exam and things like 

24           that, have you consulted with the unions PEF, 


                                                                   62

 1           CSEA, Council 82?  And what are they saying?  

 2                  COMMISSIONER HOGUES:  Yes, we have, 

 3           and they're for it.  They're behind it.  I 

 4           talked to -- actually, I talk to PEF the 

 5           most, and they have been pushing this.  

 6                  We've also met with the Council of 

 7           Mayors for New York State as well as NYSAC, 

 8           and they are asking for this to be done.  

 9           Because we know that lists right now, the 

10           system that we have right now, it just takes 

11           too long and we're not competitive with the 

12           private sector.  And so this is just one of 

13           the ways that we are trying to reduce the 

14           time that it takes to bring talent into state 

15           government.

16                  SENATOR JACKSON:  Now, I do understand 

17           that PEF and others have expressed concern 

18           about the amount of contracting out of 

19           services that they feel if in fact the 

20           staffing was up to par, that they could 

21           handle as professionals that work inside the 

22           state government.  And $1.3 billion I think 

23           in new appropriations, and 1.13 is 

24           reappropriations.  But the total, to my 


                                                                   63

 1           understanding, is over 9,000 employees, 

 2           full-time-equivalent employees are basically 

 3           being contracted out to private contractors 

 4           that can done by the state workforce.

 5                  COMMISSIONER HOGUES:  So there's a 

 6           balance, right, and we have to figure out 

 7           what that appropriate balance is.  Sometimes 

 8           you have short-term projects where it makes 

 9           sense.  

10                  But for the most part, we are really 

11           looking at how do we compete, how are we more 

12           efficient and effective in not only the 

13           on-boarding but the recruitment and the 

14           retention of the state workforce.  And so a 

15           lot of those things are in our proposal, and 

16           we look forward to the partnership and moving 

17           forward to really being able to compete and 

18           rebuild a more diverse and inclusive, 

19           talented workforce.

20                  SENATOR JACKSON:  I know -- can you 

21           tell me what has occurred within the past 

22           year as far as upgrading nurses?  Because 

23           obviously the State of New York has 

24           contracted out for nurses because there were 


                                                                   64

 1           not enough nurses.  

 2                  What are we doing to recruit nurses 

 3           into the state system, if you don't mind.

 4                  COMMISSIONER HOGUES:  Sure.  

 5                  So as you're probably aware, in 2022 

 6           we completed one of the -- a major 

 7           reconstruction of our nursing titles where a 

 8           bunch of nurses got upgrades as far as the 

 9           pay and starting salary.  We also introduced 

10           regional differentials.  And we're continuing 

11           the Nurses for Our Future program which 

12           supports tuition.  

13                  And so we will continue to look at 

14           what we need to do.  Part of our proposal is 

15           to do a comprehensive study of the civil 

16           service pay structure.  And so we're hoping 

17           that will yield some guidance and direction 

18           for us to move forward, not only for our 

19           nurses but, across the state, we know we are 

20           competing with the private sector in areas we 

21           are losing.  

22                  So we're hoping that will produce some 

23           critical information to give us some 

24           direction.


                                                                   65

 1                  SENATOR JACKSON:  Well, I think we all 

 2           agree that we're competing with the outside 

 3           market.  And so I would like to make sure 

 4           that we, you know, shine our shoes, brush our 

 5           teeth, you know, be ready as a state in order 

 6           to go out there and recruit the people that 

 7           we need to join the civil service system and 

 8           make us all proud.  So that's what I think 

 9           that we need to do.

10                  Thank you.  Thank you.  

11                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

12                  Assembly.

13                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  We go to 

14           Assemblywoman Pheffer Amato, chair of our 

15           Governmental Employees Committee.

16                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN PHEFFER AMATO:  Good 

17           afternoon.  Thank you all for your testimony.

18                  That's really loud, huh?

19                  (Laughter.)

20                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN PHEFFER AMATO:  We 

21           just -- the Senator just referred to the 

22           continuous recruitment positions.  This is 

23           for Commissioner Hogues.  How much of the 

24           current backlog of vacancies is this expected 


                                                                   66

 1           to address?

 2                  COMMISSIONER HOGUES:  So as you're 

 3           aware, the pandemic caused a lot of tests not 

 4           to be held.  Civil Service currently relies 

 5           on schools, high schools and other places to 

 6           be able to administer our civil service 

 7           exams.  To knock on wood, we are pretty 

 8           current as far as the testing schedule.  

 9                  But when we talk about the 

10           game-changing opportunity for continuous 

11           recruitment, right now we have to prioritize 

12           our agencies' requests.  So we talk to our 

13           agencies and say, Hey, what are your priority 

14           titles that we can hold exams for?  We're 

15           talking about flipping that upside down on 

16           its head and saying, Hey, let's be more 

17           efficient and effective.  

18                  Commissioner Reardon talked about 

19           technology.  That plays a huge key in this.  

20           And so when we talk about going from just 

21           pencil and paper to online continuous 

22           recruitment, and also talking about being in 

23           some of the DOL centers, having staff that is 

24           doing outreach -- and we know that there is a 


                                                                   67

 1           digital divide, and so we're not only doing 

 2           outreach as far as online and social media, 

 3           but we're looking at getting into communities 

 4           with community-based organizations, to reach 

 5           those individuals to educate them about the 

 6           opportunities in state government as well as 

 7           demystifying the "how do you get in."  Right?  

 8                  And so that's what I'm hearing on a 

 9           regular basis:  How, why, and what.  How do 

10           you get in, why is it so difficult and 

11           confusing, and what are you going to do about 

12           it?  And I think the proposals in here really 

13           take a step forward in addressing that.  

14                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN PHEFFER AMATO:  So you 

15           feel that the backlogs will really be 

16           addressed once all these -- the how, what and 

17           where, who, why and when kind of get filled 

18           in?

19                  COMMISSIONER HOGUES:  Yes.

20                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN PHEFFER AMATO:  So the 

21           backlog will start getting a nice flow and 

22           we'll get the workforce flowing, I guess is 

23           the right word.

24                  COMMISSIONER HOGUES:  Yeah.  And 


                                                                   68

 1           that's -- like I can't emphasize this enough, 

 2           we continue to compete with the private 

 3           sector.  And so I'll go back to the study, 

 4           the review of civil service at all titles, to 

 5           see where they are.  

 6                  To look at how we value titles is 

 7           important too.  In the past we weighed 

 8           heavily on individuals that supervised.  So 

 9           we also know that we have some technical 

10           titles that don't need to supervise anyone, 

11           but we need that technical knowledge and we 

12           need to pay them appropriately.

13                  And so all of this together will help 

14           us to get rid of that backlog and be able to 

15           compete.

16                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN PHEFFER AMATO:  Great.  

17                  So in that same notion, what agencies 

18           and titles do you think will most be affected 

19           by this?  You know, you could say all.  But, 

20           you know, which ones really?

21                  COMMISSIONER HOGUES:  I mean, so they 

22           are.  So we talk about a lot of the direct 

23           care, outward-facing agencies.  That's huge 

24           for them.  In my testimony I talked about the 


                                                                   69

 1           HELP program, the Hiring for Emergency 

 2           Limited Placement program, because we know 

 3           that we have to do -- we have a balancing act 

 4           to perform.  

 5                  So we have to do and we appreciate the 

 6           merit of fitness, but we've also heard from 

 7           agencies saying, I don't have enough people 

 8           to serve the public right now.  So they say, 

 9           Hey, what are we going to do?  And so we sat 

10           down and started talking through this, about 

11           how we can help them now.  And so the HELP 

12           program impacts over a hundred titles across 

13           agencies to look at individuals that meet the 

14           minimum qualifications.  They can get into 

15           state government right now.  And then in a 

16           year's time they come back to the Civil 

17           Service Commission and we can flip them over 

18           to competitive and they can continue their 

19           career advancement.

20                  So we're looking at a parallel path to 

21           this problem to really impact it.  But we 

22           know we have to do two things.  We have to 

23           solve it now, we have to look at short term 

24           as well as long term.


                                                                   70

 1                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN PHEFFER AMATO:  Great.  

 2           The Executive Budget recommends nearly 

 3           23,000 new hires.  So which positions has the 

 4           state found to be the most difficult to 

 5           recruit and retain those employees?

 6                  COMMISSIONER HOGUES:  So once again, 

 7           it's those direct care.  We all know, we hear 

 8           about it.  Some titles aren't as desirable as 

 9           others.  But quite frankly, it's across the 

10           board.  So it's -- every agency head I talk 

11           to, they're talking about, Hey, how do we do 

12           this and how can we do it quicker and faster.  

13                  And so I want to get a -- I believe 

14           the package that we have in front of you 

15           really takes a major step forward as a total 

16           package.  Individually, the pieces won't 

17           work, but when we look at them 

18           comprehensively, that's when we really start 

19           moving forward.

20                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN PHEFFER AMATO:  We have 

21           to compete with the private sector for sure.

22                  What is needed for the state to 

23           address the critical vacancies to prepare for 

24           an increase -- sorry.  What is needed more 


                                                                   71

 1           for the state to address critical vacancies 

 2           and prepare for increased retirements over 

 3           the coming years?  

 4                  COMMISSIONER HOGUES:  So we're always 

 5           looking at planning to -- sorry that the 

 6           phrase is slipping my mind.  But we're always 

 7           looking at how do we put ourselves in the 

 8           position to be successful as individuals 

 9           leave the -- leave --

10                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  Succession 

11           planning.

12                  COMMISSIONER HOGUES:  Succession 

13           planning, thank you.  So that's why this is 

14           my partner here.

15                  (Laughter.)

16                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN PHEFFER AMATO:  That's 

17           good.  Good.  Good teamwork, I like that.

18                  COMMISSIONER HOGUES:  Yeah, 

19           succession, she knew what I was talking 

20           about.  

21                  We're always looking at succession 

22           planning because that's critical.  I spent a 

23           bunch of years in the private sector, and 

24           that was always a hang-up.  And so state 


                                                                   72

 1           government is no different.  

 2                  And so we are working with agencies to 

 3           put plans together.  We believe that the 

 4           impact of COVID, where we saw the mass exodus 

 5           of individuals, we believe that is starting 

 6           to slow down.  And so now, like I said, we 

 7           are really focusing on that marketing 

 8           campaign, getting out and meeting individuals 

 9           where they are, and really pulling in that 

10           workforce to replenish and rebuild to the 

11           levels -- not only pre-COVID, but to meet the 

12           demand and the expectations of the future.

13                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN PHEFFER AMATO:  Great.  

14           Thank you for that.

15                  Regarding the establishment of the 

16           Centers for Careers in Government across the 

17           state, how many centers will there be?

18                  COMMISSIONER HOGUES:  We're looking at 

19           12.

20                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN PHEFFER AMATO:  And 

21           where will the centers be located?  Will they 

22           work with the schools and universities to 

23           connect with the potential candidates?  

24                  COMMISSIONER HOGUES:  Yes.  I'm so 


                                                                   73

 1           glad you asked that question.  

 2                  And so a theme that you've heard is 

 3           meeting individuals where they are.  We are 

 4           really looking to be more accessible, having 

 5           dedicated space, because COVID has taught us 

 6           a lot.  So individuals say, Hey, you can't 

 7           come in here because we don't know what COVID 

 8           is, and it grinds to a screeching halt.  

 9                  And so this gives us the opportunity 

10           to be in those communities, be accessible on 

11           bus lines and public transportation, and 

12           allows for us to have individuals that are 

13           experts, subject matter experts in civil 

14           service to break down that who, what, when, 

15           when, where, how, why.  And to go into 

16           communities and to work with community-based 

17           organizations that know the territory, to get 

18           those individuals the information that they 

19           need to be able to participate.  As well as 

20           running civil service exams six days a week.  

21           Right?  

22                  And so that's an accessibility issue.  

23           I've talked to individuals in the community, 

24           and they say, Hey, sometimes a Saturday just 


                                                                   74

 1           doesn't work for me.  Right?  Saturday in the 

 2           morning just doesn't work for me, I have 

 3           childcare issues, I have other stuff.  And 

 4           then if an individual misses that 

 5           opportunity, sometimes they have to wait one, 

 6           two, three, four years for the next 

 7           opportunity.  

 8                  So that's why, in conjunction with the 

 9           continuous recruitment, all of this stuff 

10           goes together to, like I said, rebuild the 

11           New York State workforce.  And it makes it 

12           easier and more accessible for individuals 

13           that are interested in joining the state 

14           workforce to be able to participate.

15                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN PHEFFER AMATO:  So you 

16           talked about CBOs.  So would these centers 

17           serve as testing locations, like the CBO 

18           would be? 

19                  COMMISSIONER HOGUES:  Yeah, so we're 

20           working with SUNY and CUNY locations across 

21           the state to establish state-operated testing 

22           facilities.  And these will run six days a 

23           week.  And so they will be able to come here 

24           to get the information about civil service 


                                                                   75

 1           opportunities, they'll be able to take exams 

 2           here.  If an individual doesn't have access 

 3           to a computer or WiFi, they will be able to 

 4           take online exams at these locations.  

 5                  And so we -- once again, I don't want 

 6           to underestimate, but we understand that yes, 

 7           digital and viral is the way to go, but we 

 8           also understand that there's still somewhat 

 9           of a digital divide.  So we're trying to 

10           address all those barriers.

11                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN PHEFFER AMATO:  Great, 

12           thank you.  

13                  And for my 33 seconds, Director 

14           Volforte, the executive proposes maintaining 

15           pay equity with the private sector.  How is 

16           the pay gap between public and private sector 

17           currently, and how much will this cost over 

18           the next five years to implement?  

19                  DIRECTOR VOLFORTE:  I don't think we 

20           know exactly what the difference is.  I think 

21           the difference will depend on titles.  you 

22           know, certainly we know in certain healthcare 

23           titles we are -- there's an ever-increasing 

24           demand and limited supply, so that keeps 


                                                                   76

 1           driving the price up and up and up for 

 2           everybody, not just the state.  

 3                  But part of the proposal is a study to 

 4           work on that, and then we'll find out what 

 5           those numbers are.

 6                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you.  

 7                  To the Senate.

 8                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.  

 9                  Our ranker on Civil Service, 

10           Senator Weik.  Five minutes.

11                  SENATOR WEIK:  Thank you so much.  

12                  Good afternoon, and thank you so much 

13           for your testimony today and for being so 

14           patient with all of our questions.

15                  I've been meeting with a lot of my 

16           libraries and I'm noticing that -- so I 

17           represent Long Island, parts of Nassau 

18           County, parts of Suffolk County, and a lot of 

19           our libraries are complaining that they have 

20           very specific job titles.  And they may find 

21           a qualified individual who maybe lives in the 

22           other county, and so they cannot give them 

23           that title in their library.  And so they're 

24           left without someone fulfilling those job 


                                                                   77

 1           responsibilities.

 2                  So how can we be more flexible, or can 

 3           we be more flexible?  I understand we have to 

 4           pick locals first, and we have that provision 

 5           for a reason.  Is there a way that we can be 

 6           more flexible so that we can meet the needs 

 7           of our libraries?

 8                  COMMISSIONER HOGUES:  So yes, there -- 

 9           and so there's a little bit difference 

10           between state and local.  

11                  So local has jurisdiction and 

12           provision to be able to create local rules 

13           around how they operate.  And so we provide 

14           advisement to them and technical assistance.  

15           And so I'm sure, if there's conversations 

16           with the local civil service division, that 

17           we could figure those things out.  And if 

18           they have questions they can reach out to our 

19           municipal services division to provide that 

20           type of support.

21                  But we've done that type of stuff in 

22           the past.  And yes, I was a local civil 

23           service commissioner from Erie County, and so 

24           I can say yes, there are ways to work through 


                                                                   78

 1           that.

 2                  SENATOR WEIK:  Okay, thank you.

 3                  And so we are looking for -- you know, 

 4           during these times I think we've seen 

 5           something -- I used to work, I was the 

 6           receiver of taxes in my town, and we had 

 7           civil service employees in that.  And of 

 8           course as we went through the pandemic we 

 9           really did kind of expect our employees to 

10           flex and move with the times, learn new 

11           technology and so on.

12                  Is there a way that we can be more 

13           flexible in the titles?  Because when we read 

14           the civil service titles, quite a few of them 

15           are very specific.  Is there room for 

16           flexibility?  Can we create that?

17                  COMMISSIONER HOGUES:  So at the state 

18           we have a class in compensation that reviews 

19           titles on a regular basis, and so there is 

20           that opportunity for titles to be reviewed 

21           and refined.  

22                  I know on a regular basis when I was 

23           in local government that every time we were 

24           about to fill a position we'd look at the 


                                                                   79

 1           title to say, Does this still make sense?  

 2           Are these still the job elements that this 

 3           individual will be doing? 

 4                  We saw some that were talking about 

 5           typewriting skills and some other stuff that 

 6           just said we haven't done that since I don't 

 7           know how long.  So yes, we should be looking 

 8           at that on a regular basis.

 9                  SENATOR WEIK:  We had that as well.  

10           We didn't even own typewriters.

11                  COMMISSIONER HOGUES:  Yeah.

12                  SENATOR WEIK:  So my next question, 

13           Commissioner Reardon -- first of all, I want 

14           to say thank you very much.  In my previous 

15           district over the last two years we did have 

16           a huge outpouring of individuals who needed 

17           unemployment, and unemployment was reasonably 

18           responsive and we had really good outcomes, 

19           and so I thank you for that.

20                  But now the conversation that I'm 

21           hearing is of responsibility in a different 

22           way, and people are really concerned that 

23           perhaps we're not aggressively going after -- 

24           to recoup fraud money, money that had been 


                                                                   80

 1           taken that shouldn't be out there.  And how 

 2           aggressively are we looking to recoup those 

 3           funds?

 4                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  Very.

 5                  So we have referred over a million 

 6           claims to the federal government.  It is a 

 7           federal crime to steal this money.  We are 

 8           working with the FBI, we work with the OIG on 

 9           the national level.  We work with the state's 

10           Attorney General, we work with the district 

11           attorneys.  If you go back through our press 

12           releases you'll see press releases about 

13           district attorneys going after people.  We 

14           have a number of cases that resulted in large 

15           recoupments.  We have pulled back half a 

16           billion dollars and counting.  And it will 

17           take a long time.

18                  Now, I want everybody to understand 

19           the money that was stolen by the 

20           international cyber-rings, probably very 

21           little of that will be recovered, because 

22           it's not here.  And those people are not 

23           here.  And that is -- that is a hard pill to 

24           swallow, I must say.  But that is simply the 


                                                                   81

 1           truth.

 2                  But if they're in the United States, 

 3           if we have a way to identify them, we go 

 4           after them.  And there is no time limit.  If 

 5           you stole that money in 2020 and we discover 

 6           in 2045 that that's who you are, we will go 

 7           after you.  There is no limit to that kind of 

 8           pursuit.  And, you know, we are not a law 

 9           enforcement agency, but we're very happy to 

10           work with every law enforcement agency that 

11           will let us.

12                  SENATOR WEIK:  Thank you.

13                  One last question, in my time.

14                  Commissioner Hogues, what are we doing 

15           to recruit younger individuals to make sure 

16           that we have that civil service pool to pull 

17           from?

18                  COMMISSIONER HOGUES:  So, real quick, 

19           we are reaching out to, like I said, 

20           community-based organizations that have 

21           connections throughout the community.  We are 

22           looking at high schools and colleges.  As I 

23           mentioned, we are trying to set up testing 

24           sites on colleges--


                                                                   82

 1                  SENATOR WEIK:  I only have 2 -- oh, 

 2           I'm sorry, I just wanted to, quick, a lot of 

 3           these tests do require a certain amount of 

 4           college education or experience.  Are we 

 5           looking to relax some of those?

 6                  COMMISSIONER HOGUES:  We're looking at 

 7           equivalency-type stuff.

 8                  SENATOR WEIK:  Okay, good.  Thank you.

 9                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

10                  Assembly.  

11                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  We go to 

12           Assemblyman DeStefano, ranker, for five 

13           minutes.

14                  ASSEMBLYMAN DeSTEFANO:  Good 

15           afternoon.  Thanks for coming.  Thanks for 

16           toughing it out with us throughout this 

17           process.

18                  My first question is going to be for 

19           Commissioner Hogues.  There's been some talk 

20           recently, there are numerous reports the 

21           Governor's lowering the reimbursement rate 

22           for our out-of-network doctors, impacting 

23           health insurance benefits for the over 

24           1 million state employees and retirees who 


                                                                   83

 1           use the Empire Plan.  Can you explain how the 

 2           administration came to this decision to 

 3           change the reimbursement rate for 

 4           out-of-network doctors?

 5                  COMMISSIONER HOGUES:  So as I've 

 6           mentioned, that the agreement between 

 7           New York State and CSEA will save the state, 

 8           local governments, and public authorities and 

 9           enrollees over $300 million a year.  

10                  And so we have a very robust network, 

11           and so this will impact individuals that 

12           choose to go outside of the network.  And 

13           so --

14                  ASSEMBLYMAN DeSTEFANO:  How would that 

15           affect -- how did that affect out-of-state 

16           workers who retired to like Florida or 

17           Colorado or wherever?  How does that affect 

18           them?

19                  COMMISSIONER HOGUES:  So we -- once 

20           again, we have a network that spans across 

21           the country that is -- and we're always 

22           looking to bring individuals, organizations 

23           into our network to make it more expansive.  

24                  But when we took a look at it, some of 


                                                                   84

 1           the charges for out-of-network were 

 2           astronomical, and we just couldn't cover 

 3           that.  And once again, I have to emphasize 

 4           that our network is pretty darn good.  And 

 5           the services and the providers in it are 

 6           excellent.  And so when we took a look at 

 7           this, we said it makes sense to be fiscally 

 8           responsible.  And we believe that individuals 

 9           have the opportunity to get the services and 

10           support they need in-network.

11                  ASSEMBLYMAN DeSTEFANO:  Okay.  So is 

12           there an estimate of what we think this is 

13           going to save the plan?  

14                  COMMISSIONER HOGUES:  And so that was 

15           the 300 million annually.

16                  ASSEMBLYMAN DeSTEFANO:  Is that in the 

17           Governor's budget, like the proposal's going 

18           to be added in that we're going to save this 

19           amount of money that's -- 

20                  COMMISSIONER HOGUES:  That -- that -- 

21           that is -- so that was in -- it's part of the 

22           contract.

23                  ASSEMBLYMAN DeSTEFANO:  Okay.  Moving 

24           on, Governor Hochul has stated that the 


                                                                   85

 1           state's public workforce has been facing a 

 2           shortage of 12,500 workers, with more than 

 3           26 percent of the state workforce eligible 

 4           for retirement in the next five years.  

 5                  I know we kind of touched on it a 

 6           little bit, but is there any real specific 

 7           way of recruiting -- I mean, we talk about 

 8           the communities and going into the 

 9           communities and things.  Is there any real 

10           specific ways of trying to recruit more 

11           people to come to the workforce?  

12                  As we all know, when we took these -- 

13           I've been a civil servant for 30 years.

14                  COMMISSIONER HOGUES:  Thank you.

15                  ASSEMBLYMAN DeSTEFANO:  I know what it 

16           is.  But when we took these jobs back in the 

17           day, it was the idea that we weren't getting 

18           paid a higher salary but we had benefits to 

19           offset the salary that we weren't getting.

20                  Where are we bridging the gap between 

21           what the public sector and the private sector 

22           pay, putting the health insurance and all the 

23           other benefits that come with it -- how do we 

24           get that message to the people that we are 


                                                                   86

 1           just as viable as the private sector?

 2                  COMMISSIONER HOGUES:  Well, thank you 

 3           so much for that question.  And part of our 

 4           proposal is a marketing campaign that talks 

 5           about how great it is to be in state 

 6           government and choosing state government as a 

 7           career.  

 8                  And so we've done a lot of work with 

 9           my partner to my right, DOL, to promote 

10           careers in government.  And it's been 

11           successful.  In our entry-level law 

12           enforcement, we had over a million hits to 

13           some of the marketing things that we did.  

14           And it was just taking individuals that are 

15           currently working for the state workforce, 

16           videotape them talking about the stuff that 

17           they do on a regular basis and how they value 

18           it.  

19                  And so there's a comprehensive 

20           approach to it.  It -- it's -- like I said, 

21           some is going to be through social media.  A 

22           lot of it is also going to be through boots 

23           on the ground talking with community-based 

24           organizations and those types to be able to 


                                                                   87

 1           not only talk about opportunity but once 

 2           again demystify what it is to enter into 

 3           state government through the competitive 

 4           ranks.

 5                  ASSEMBLYMAN DeSTEFANO:  Thank you.  

 6                  My last question is going to be for 

 7           Commissioner Reardon.  Remember years ago we 

 8           had all those Zoomyland conferences about the 

 9           antiquated system that we had?  And at that 

10           time when we spoke, you said that you were 

11           going to be doing a lot more in upgrades to 

12           the system.  Have we got there yet?

13                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  We are -- we 

14           are in the last part of the modernization.  I 

15           mean, the -- unfortunately during the 

16           pandemic our contractor had to -- not pause, 

17           but slow down a little bit in order to help 

18           us stabilize the old mainframe system so it 

19           wouldn't just blow up.  

20                  But, you know, we are getting there.  

21           We hope by the end of the year to roll out 

22           the mod, and it will be great.

23                  ASSEMBLYMAN DeSTEFANO:  Thank you.

24                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you.


                                                                   88

 1                  To the Senate.  

 2                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you very 

 3           much.

 4                  Next up is Senator Hinchey.

 5                  SENATOR HINCHEY:  Thank you.  I was 

 6           unprepared for this moment.  Thank you.  

 7                  Thank you all for being here and for 

 8           your work.  I'm going to take a shot and have 

 9           my first question hopefully be for the 

10           commissioner.  Tell me if you have an opinion 

11           here, knowing we don't have someone from PERB 

12           speaking today.  With the farmworker bill and 

13           the movement forward with the regulations 

14           that you just put in place, it's more 

15           important than ever to have a properly funded 

16           and functioning PERB.  I hear that both from 

17           farmers and farmworkers who are trying to 

18           call the agency and don't have people who 

19           speak the language, they don't have answers, 

20           it takes very long.  And yet in the budget 

21           the funding -- a lot of that funding was cut.  

22                  Is there anything -- knowing it's not 

23           necessarily exactly your purview, but having 

24           a strong stake at this moment, you know, how 


                                                                   89

 1           can we be better at making sure not only that 

 2           they're funded but that now that we have 

 3           these new regulations that we're actually 

 4           being responsive and getting information out 

 5           and doing it in a way that serves both the 

 6           workers and the farmers?

 7                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  Is that a me 

 8           question?

 9                  SENATOR HINCHEY:  I'll open it to any 

10           of you because -- I think so, but --

11                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  So I'll take a 

12           crack at it.  You know, PERB is not in my 

13           lane at all.  And so I think that it -- you 

14           know, if there are issues, I think people 

15           need to raise them.  PERB is a small agency 

16           and I think the -- you're talking about the 

17           farmworker organizing part of it.  And I 

18           think if there are issues, it just makes 

19           sense for people to raise those early and 

20           often so people understand that there's a 

21           need there.

22                  SENATOR HINCHEY:  Then I'll just put 

23           it on your radar:  They are.  They are 

24           raising them.


                                                                   90

 1                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  I just heard 

 2           yesterday, actually.

 3                  SENATOR HINCHEY:  Yeah, they are 

 4           raising them.  And quite frankly PERB is not 

 5           being helpful, they are not kind of in the 

 6           place that they should be.  

 7                  And so maybe we can all try to work 

 8           together here to figure out a better path 

 9           forward both in staffing and funding and 

10           others.

11                  Quickly, my next question is for 

12           Commissioner Hogues.  You know, we could have 

13           a whole other conversation as you're 

14           answering now on much of the civil service 

15           exam.  But I'll raise in our communities -- I 

16           represent the Hudson Valley, and we have a 

17           lot of very small police departments who are 

18           struggling to recruit new members, and 

19           they're very important to our areas.

20                  You know, some of the challenges they 

21           face are between lack of reciprocity between 

22           counties.  And so, briefly, are you open or 

23           do you -- how do you see that?  And do you 

24           see an avenue or a lane there to be able to 


                                                                   91

 1           expand that option?

 2                  COMMISSIONER HOGUES:  Yeah, that's a 

 3           difficult question that we'd probably have to 

 4           sit down and talk to further.  Because 

 5           there's the reciprocity issue that exists in 

 6           state government, agency to agency and who 

 7           has the funds.  But I will be more than --

 8                  SENATOR HINCHEY:  Would love to talk 

 9           with you more about that.  Thank you.

10                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

11                  Assembly.  

12                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Assemblyman 

13           Bronson.

14                  ASSEMBLYMAN BRONSON:  Thank you, 

15           Madam Chair.  

16                  And thank you all for coming and 

17           testifying.  My questions are going to be for 

18           Commissioner Reardon.  I also want to thank 

19           you for being so accessible and being a 

20           partner with us.

21                  My first question relates to 

22           apprenticeships.  And I know you're a fan of 

23           apprenticeships.  I am as well and think that 

24           every industry should have apprenticeship 


                                                                   92

 1           programs.  But we passed the Empire State 

 2           Apprenticeship Tax Credit a number of years 

 3           ago, we have renewed it and extended it.  

 4                  And my question is, how are we doing?  

 5           Are folks taking advantage of that tax 

 6           credit?  And if so, do you have any data on 

 7           that?

 8                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  First of all, 

 9           thank you very much for passing that, because 

10           it has really helped us expand 

11           apprenticeships.  It is really great.  People 

12           get an extra bump if they work with 

13           disadvantaged youth, and they also get an 

14           extra bump if they have a mentoring program.  

15           Really smart add to that.  

16                  We had 63 applications last year in 

17           2022, which considering a pandemic year, 

18           really good.  We had 85 tax credit 

19           certificates issued in '21.  The credits 

20           totaled approximately $700,000.  It is a 

21           really robust opportunity.  We want to expand 

22           it everywhere.  

23                  And I'd just say that two of the new 

24           apprenticeship programs that we have this 


                                                                   93

 1           year -- Steinway Pianos has a new registered 

 2           apprenticeship program where they learn to 

 3           build a Steinway piano from beginning to end.  

 4           And Tiffany's now has a registered 

 5           apprenticeship program for jewel-setters.  

 6           And I visited both of them.  It is amazing.  

 7           It is an incredible opportunity for young 

 8           people -- middle-aged people.  They're not 

 9           all really young -- to get really great 

10           training and have a fabulous career.  

11                  So thank you.

12                  ASSEMBLYMAN BRONSON:  All right, 

13           great.  That's good news.  I'm glad that the 

14           program's working.  

15                  Chair Joyner asked this question about 

16           the legislation we passed in the 2017-2018 

17           cycle that would require a searchable 

18           database catalog online.  I'm glad to hear 

19           that is up and running.  I'm sad to tell you 

20           I've had three staff people look for it 

21           online and could not find it.  So we need to 

22           do some work in that regard.  

23                  And the question is --

24                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  It's on the 


                                                                   94

 1           New York State Open Data website.  It's not 

 2           on our website.

 3                  ASSEMBLYMAN BRONSON:  Ah, maybe that's 

 4           why.

 5                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  Yeah.  Yeah.

 6                  ASSEMBLYMAN BRONSON:  Okay.  So the 

 7           question is this.  Does it include job 

 8           training programs that are not through the 

 9           Department of Labor but might be through SED, 

10           SUNY or ESD?

11                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  So we gather 

12           information from all the state agencies that 

13           have workforce programs.  We also have the 

14           eligible provider training list.  And we are 

15           beginning an inventory of training programs 

16           with an emphasis on regional pipelines, and 

17           we're going to get them published in a more 

18           friendly format than an Excel file, frankly.  

19                  We are working very closely with SUNY 

20           and CUNY on all of this.  And again, we want 

21           to make it more robust.  You should be able 

22           to find a training program easily.

23                  ASSEMBLYMAN BRONSON:  One quick 

24           question, yes or no:  Does that information 


                                                                   95

 1           include outcomes?

 2                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  I don't think 

 3           so.

 4                  ASSEMBLYMAN BRONSON:  Thank you.

 5                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Senate.  

 6                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you very 

 7           much.  

 8                  Next is Ranker Jack Martins on Labor, 

 9           five minutes.

10                  SENATOR MARTINS:  Commissioner, how 

11           are you?

12                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  Good afternoon.

13                  SENATOR MARTINS:  And Commissioner and 

14           Director.  

15                  I believe in the dignity of work.  I 

16           Believe it's important for us to make sure 

17           that we put New Yorkers to work and that 

18           they're paid a fair wage.  And I think that 

19           sort of drives our vocation here, certainly 

20           for me on the Senate Labor Committee.

21                  To that end, I hear from our building 

22           trades that we have all of this work that we 

23           put out -- prevailing wage work, work that 

24           requires certified payrolls.  And that 


                                                                   96

 1           there's a concern that there's no one 

 2           actually checking, verifying that people are 

 3           complying with those requirements.  And from 

 4           time to time someone is caught.  But there's 

 5           a sense, certainly in the building trade 

 6           community, that it's much more prevalent, and 

 7           they hope that there's going to be an 

 8           enforcement mechanism.  

 9                  Can you speak to that?

10                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  So I have not 

11           had anyone raise that to me in that 

12           particular way.

13                  We -- you know, we -- again, we follow 

14           tips.  When somebody registers a complaint, 

15           we go out and pull it -- we pull a lot of 

16           these payroll devices all the time.  Let me 

17           talk to my worker protection people and 

18           see -- actually, probably more like public 

19           work than worker protection.  But let me see 

20           if there's other ways that we could enforce 

21           it.  

22                  I have not had the construction trades 

23           bring this to me, so I'm a little surprised.  

24           But I'd be happy to look into it. 


                                                                   97

 1                  SENATOR MARTINS:  I've been hearing 

 2           about it for years.  And certainly --

 3                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  Well, they 

 4           should talk to me.

 5                  SENATOR MARTINS:  Well, I have spoken 

 6           to you in the past about it as well, 

 7           Commissioner.  So we'll -- we'll revisit it.

 8                  For our civil service list, 

 9           Commissioner, I have a -- Hogues, excuse 

10           me -- I have a request.  I come from Nassau 

11           County.  We have fire marshals in 

12           Nassau County in particular that are 

13           desperately in need of lists and tests.  And 

14           since I'm here, I'm taking the opportunity to 

15           place that and would like the opportunity 

16           perhaps to go back and look.

17                  I know that we have an opportunity -- 

18           and there is always some difficulty in making 

19           sure that lists and tests are current.  But 

20           some of these may go back a few years.  I 

21           would just appreciate it if you'd look into 

22           that.  Because again, there are opportunities 

23           for employment, they're restricted from being 

24           able to employ people, especially when we're 


                                                                   98

 1           dealing with emergency services personnel.  

 2                  And I would certainly appreciate it, 

 3           and I'll follow up with you after this 

 4           hearing.

 5                  COMMISSIONER HOGUES:  Yes, I am 

 6           definitely open to it.

 7                  SENATOR MARTINS:  But I heard earlier 

 8           that the lists are current.  Some of them 

 9           have -- that are more popular have been put 

10           online.  And so I would just ask, with 

11           respect to fire marshals and emergency fire 

12           services, perhaps if you would go back and 

13           check on those lists to make sure that they 

14           are actually current.

15                  COMMISSIONER HOGUES:  Yes.  I most 

16           certainly will.

17                  SENATOR MARTINS:  And Commissioner 

18           Reardon, going back to unemployment 

19           insurance.  You know, there's a real concern 

20           out there -- I know we've all heard it.  

21           You've heard it from some of my colleagues 

22           already.  

23                  You know, is there -- has there been a 

24           discussion or is there the possibility -- we 


                                                                   99

 1           understand that the state does have a surplus 

 2           this year.  We also understand that there was 

 3           a tremendous amount of money spent during the 

 4           pandemic to keep people employed.  We are now 

 5           repaying that debt to the federal government.

 6                  Is there any discussion with regard to 

 7           providing relief for small business owners to 

 8           allow for some of that unemployment insurance 

 9           debt or payment to actually be ameliorated?

10                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  So again, 

11           because we did not do the experience rating 

12           for the two years, every business got $836, 

13           approximately, for three years for each 

14           employee that they had.  So there has been 

15           some relief already.

16                  The repayment of the federal loan for 

17           the -- to make sure we can make the payments, 

18           that is a federal regulation.  And the amount 

19           and all of that is dictated by federal law.

20                  That said, we have worked with USDOL.  

21           I know the executive chamber has worked with 

22           the delegation.  We have worked with 

23           associations.  We've worked with other 

24           states.  We're looking at many ways to try to 


                                                                   100

 1           relieve -- any way we can relieve any of this 

 2           debt.  

 3                  We are one of eight states that signed 

 4           a letter to Janet Yellen saying that we think 

 5           that it's up to the federal government to 

 6           forgive that debt.  But so far we have not 

 7           received any relief.

 8                  SENATOR MARTINS:  I do appreciate 

 9           that.  But again, there are monies that are 

10           available and there are ways for the state to 

11           offset those expenses with state resources, 

12           some of which actually came from the federal 

13           government, in relief, for COVID-related 

14           expenses in the state, and they were not used 

15           for unemployment insurance, they were used 

16           for other things.  

17                  Now that we have a surplus, have there 

18           been discussions to use it for relief?

19                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  That is -- that 

20           is not some discussion that I would be 

21           having.  But I would certainly, you know, 

22           have a conversation with the executive 

23           chamber about it.  

24                  You know, the Governor had a large 


                                                                   101

 1           amount of problems to solve with a relatively 

 2           small amount of money.

 3                  SENATOR MARTINS:  And a surplus.

 4                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

 5                  Assembly.  

 6                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Assemblywoman 

 7           Giglio.

 8                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN GIGLIO:  Hi.  Thank you 

 9           so much for being here, and thank you for all 

10           you do.  Really appreciate all of your 

11           cooperation with all of my constituents, not 

12           only during the pandemic for unemployment 

13           insurance, as my other colleagues have 

14           stated, but you are faced with a very 

15           difficult task, all of you, and I appreciate 

16           you being here.

17                  My question is -- well, first of all, 

18           I think we're running around in circles 

19           because the real problem to the workforce in 

20           New York State is Tier 6.  We need to fix 

21           Tier 6.  Is anyone having those conversations 

22           with our Comptroller, Thomas DiNapoli, to 

23           come up with solutions to incentivize people 

24           to enter the workforce?  Because the starting 


                                                                   102

 1           pays are so low, the -- what they have to pay 

 2           is so high that it doesn't pay for them to 

 3           come to work.  They'd rather be on 

 4           unemployment.  

 5                  So is anyone having conversations with 

 6           the Comptroller on how to fix Tier 6?

 7                  COMMISSIONER HOGUES:  So I have not 

 8           had conversations with the Comptroller as far 

 9           as Tier 6.  

10                  But when I look at the state's 

11           compensation package as whole, paid time off 

12           and -- Tier 6, obviously compared to the 

13           other tiers, may not be as be favorable.  But 

14           when I look at it, I believe we are 

15           competitive.  

16                  But the other thing I realize is that 

17           our pay structure dates back to the 1950s.

18                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN GIGLIO:  Exactly.

19                  COMMISSIONER HOGUES:  And so that's 

20           why we are putting that in our proposal, to 

21           really look at that and look at the job 

22           evaluation so we can evaluate the jobs 

23           appropriately.  

24                  We know that in some of the studies 


                                                                   103

 1           that we've done, that jobs predominantly 

 2           filled by women are at a lower rate.  And so 

 3           we're taking all that into account to make 

 4           sure that we are at an appropriate level to 

 5           be able to compete.

 6                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN GIGLIO:  Thank you.  And 

 7           I thank you for your response, and you've 

 8           answered my question.  Thank you very much.  

 9                  And speaking of that, with women 

10           having to get back into the workforce, the 

11           biggest hurdle is childcare.  And that their 

12           monthly pay pays for childcare and they are 

13           working really for the benefits.

14                  So I'm wondering, because we have 

15           state childcare facilities here, what you are 

16           all doing about putting childcare or 

17           incentivizing private manufacturers to put in 

18           childcare facilities so that they can bring 

19           these people to the workforce.  Not only in 

20           the state and county facilities, but in the 

21           private manufacturing facilities.  And we all 

22           do need to focus on buying from New York and 

23           our private manufacturers.  

24                  And, Commissioner, if you would please 


                                                                   104

 1           answer that question for me.

 2                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  So I was on the 

 3           Childcare Availability Task Force.  I'm on it 

 4           again; it's been re-upped.  I'm very proud to 

 5           do that work.  And childcare is absolutely 

 6           the top of every woman's mind who works.  It 

 7           has taken women out of --

 8                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN GIGLIO:  Women and men, 

 9           because now women are moving up in the 

10           workforce and men are home taking care of the 

11           children.

12                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  Yup.  Every 

13           parent.  Every parent has this concern.  And 

14           we are very focused on it.  I think you 

15           probably saw in the news that President 

16           Biden's CHIPS Act includes incentivizing that 

17           kind of childcare, and it's a great move.

18                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN GIGLIO:  Thank you for 

19           your thoughtful answers.

20                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you.

21                  To the Senate.  

22                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.  

23           Assemblymember Shelley Mayer.

24                  SENATOR MAYER:  Thank you.  Thank you 


                                                                   105

 1           very much.  And thank you, Commissioner, and 

 2           all of you for being here.  

 3                  A question for you, Commissioner 

 4           Reardon, again on this issue of home care.  

 5           What is the precedent for excluding a group 

 6           of low-wage workers from an across-the-board 

 7           minimum-wage increase?  I've just never seen 

 8           such a thing before.  We fought tooth and 

 9           nail to get that money.  It did not come 

10           easy.  It's hard for me to understand what is 

11           the Governor's justification for excluding 

12           them if other workers receive, for example, a 

13           dollar wage increase.

14                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  Well, I mean 

15           right now they're not working at the regular 

16           minimum wage, I would assume is what the 

17           thinking was.  I don't know.  But, you know, 

18           they are two or three dollars above the 

19           minimum wage.

20                  SENATOR MAYER:  But just -- 

21           respectfully -- that's what we did.  That's 

22           what we passed.  That's why we did it, to get 

23           them above the minimum wage in order to keep 

24           them in their jobs.  


                                                                   106

 1                  So I'm asking, what's the 

 2           justification for not continuing that logic 

 3           that they needed to be above minimum wage in 

 4           order to retain and attract new people?  

 5                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  As I understand 

 6           it, the additional money put to home care 

 7           workers was to stabilize that part of the 

 8           industry and attract more people to it.  And 

 9           it was in a specific moment in time, not 

10           necessarily forever.

11                  And as I said, as the wages go up, as 

12           they begin to be more in parity, it can be 

13           looked at again.  But that was my 

14           understanding of the logic.

15                  SENATOR MAYER:  Okay.  Question number 

16           two.  Your report shows that violations of 

17           the child labor laws in New York State went 

18           up incredibly, 68 percent in 2022.  That is I 

19           think the Department of Labor's report.  

20                  Are there any criminal convictions 

21           associated with that?  You -- in your 

22           testimony you reflect civil fines.

23                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  I do not know 

24           specifically what is -- you know, what came 


                                                                   107

 1           out of all -- there were a lot of fines.  We 

 2           don't tend to do -- we don't do the criminal 

 3           stuff, we have to refer it.  So I don't know 

 4           what those referrals were.  I can find out.  

 5                  We do know that in the last two years 

 6           specifically there was a large increase, and 

 7           it is very alarming.  You all saw the 

 8           articles in the New York Times.  We'll be 

 9           working very closely with the Governor on 

10           this.  We want to do a lot more focus on it.  

11           Obviously we cannot have children in 

12           dangerous situations in any job, let alone in 

13           some of the horrendous situations that were 

14           revealed in the Times article.

15                  SENATOR MAYER:  Right.  That's why I'm 

16           asking about criminal penalties.  

17                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  Yeah.  I mean, 

18           they would have to be referred to a DA.

19                  SENATOR MAYER:  Yes, I understand.  If 

20           someone could get back to me, that would be 

21           good.

22                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  Yup.

23                  SENATOR MAYER:  I want to thank 

24           Commissioner Hogues -- I'd be remiss if I 


                                                                   108

 1           didn't -- for the change in the rule that 

 2           allows now EMS workers that are associated 

 3           with a not-for-profit -- a quasi-municipality 

 4           to obtain Empire Plan.  Thank you very much.  

 5           That is a game-changer for EMS workers 

 6           throughout the state.

 7                  But I did have a question about the 

 8           frequency of tests.  You referenced that a 

 9           number of tests are moving to virtual tests 

10           as opposed to in-person.  What percentage of 

11           the tests will be online?  If you know.  

12           Just --

13                  COMMISSIONER HOGUES:  Yeah, we'll have 

14           to look at it and see.

15                  SENATOR MAYER:  You don't have a 

16           percentage.

17                  COMMISSIONER HOGUES:  No.  No, we 

18           don't have a percentage.

19                  SENATOR MAYER:  Thank you.

20                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.  

21                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you.  

22                  We go to Assemblyman Smullen. 

23                  ASSEMBLYMAN SMULLEN:  Thank you, 

24           Chair.  


                                                                   109

 1                  Commissioners and Director, thanks for 

 2           being here today.  

 3                  I just want to make sure I have got 

 4           all this straight in my head sort of thing as 

 5           we, you know, wrap up what happened in the 

 6           coronavirus pandemic.  We owe $8 billion to 

 7           the federal government.  That's a rough 

 8           figure.  We lost, according to the 

 9           Comptroller, somewhere around $11 billion.  

10                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  We dispute that 

11           fact.

12                  ASSEMBLYMAN SMULLEN:  I'm sorry?

13                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  We do not agree 

14           with that.  It was not a finding of the 

15           audit.

16                  ASSEMBLYMAN SMULLEN:  What is your 

17           number?  How much did we lose?

18                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  Four billion.

19                  ASSEMBLYMAN SMULLEN:  Four billion?

20                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  Four billion.  

21           Of which $388 million was in the state trust.

22                  ASSEMBLYMAN SMULLEN:  I'll let you 

23           argue with the Comptroller over methods and 

24           means of forensic accounting.  


                                                                   110

 1                  And now we're -- over the next five 

 2           years we're going to ask our small businesses 

 3           for about $6 billion to make sure the fund is 

 4           topped up?  

 5                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  We have to 

 6           repay the fund that was -- the money that -- 

 7           the funding that was borrowed from the 

 8           federal government.  And the fund needs to be 

 9           rebuilt.

10                  ASSEMBLYMAN SMULLEN:  But we're asking 

11           our small businesses essentially to --

12                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  We're asking 

13           all businesses that have employees --

14                  ASSEMBLYMAN SMULLEN:  All businesses, 

15           50 percent of which are small businesses in 

16           New York State, which provide the --

17                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  That's the law.

18                  ASSEMBLYMAN SMULLEN:  The vast 

19           majority of employers are small businesses.

20                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  That's the law.

21                  ASSEMBLYMAN SMULLEN:  Right.  Of 

22           course.  And now one of the things that has 

23           occurred to me as we're in this panel here 

24           with the Governor's Office of Employee 


                                                                   111

 1           Relations is we're thinking about allowing 

 2           more people to telecommute.  And one of the 

 3           things during the pandemic was -- is that 

 4           telecommuting is probably one of the reasons 

 5           why we lost contact with people that we could 

 6           then verify that they were a citizen, a 

 7           person eligible for unemployment insurance 

 8           benefit.  

 9                  Is your department fully back to work 

10           and staffed to see people in-person to 

11           determine --

12                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  Yes.  Yes.  All 

13           of our 96 Career Centers have been open for 

14           quite a while.  Our state workers are back in 

15           the office.  

16                  We do have a telecommuting policy.  We 

17           have a small number of workers who almost a 

18           hundred percent telecommute because they are 

19           telephone agents and they're on a phone.  So 

20           they don't have to be in an office.  

21           Everybody else is back.  But there is a 

22           policy that allows people, under certain 

23           circumstances, to have some days of 

24           telecommuting. 


                                                                   112

 1                  ASSEMBLYMAN SMULLEN:  Sure, and I -- 

 2           obviously that's -- you know, that's a good 

 3           thing, but you have to verify that, you know, 

 4           the person is there for their insurance 

 5           claim.

 6                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  We are very, 

 7           very careful about who gets to telecommute 

 8           and who does not, and they have to have a 

 9           business plan, as it were, with their 

10           supervisor.  It was something that we rolled 

11           out before the pandemic, actually, which was 

12           very successful, and then we were ready, 

13           sadly, to handle, you know, everybody going 

14           remote.  But they are back at work because we 

15           need them.

16                  ASSEMBLYMAN SMULLEN:  And we do, we 

17           need them on the job doing the thing.  I'm 

18           still receiving unemployment -- just so you 

19           know and the public knows, still receiving 

20           questions about unemployment insurance claims 

21           from the pandemic, still adjudicating claims 

22           and working with your offices to do so.  And 

23           I appreciate all the employees that have 

24           worked so hard to do that.  


                                                                   113

 1                  Because there are still issues out 

 2           there.  Just so everyone knows, this isn't 

 3           quite over yet, and we need to kind of work 

 4           our way through the rest of these issues.  

 5           Thank you so much.

 6                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  Yes.  Thank 

 7           you.  

 8                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.  

 9                  Senator Rhoads has joined us and has a 

10           question or two.

11                  SENATOR RHOADS:  Okay.  Thank you very 

12           much, Chairwoman, I appreciate that.  

13                  And thank you to our panelists for 

14           your presentations and for your thoughtful 

15           answers to our questions.  

16                  Just a follow-up for Commissioner 

17           Reardon.  I know that my colleague Senator 

18           Martins inquired about surplus money.  And I 

19           know that you said it was a bit above your 

20           pay grade -- 

21                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  I don't handle 

22           that part of the budget.

23                  SENATOR RHOADS:  -- to make a 

24           determination with respect to that.  


                                                                   114

 1                  Is there any prohibition in the 

 2           federal regulations to the state using 

 3           surplus money rather than tapping into 

 4           employers to provide those funds?

 5                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  I don't believe 

 6           there is.  I'm not quite sure -- the term 

 7           "surplus money."  But I -- you know, states 

 8           can make arrangements, you know, as they 

 9           wish.

10                  The federal government requires that 

11           it's repaid.  And it has -- and FUTA requires 

12           the schedule for that repayment.  Other 

13           states have done other things.  

14                  But I must say the enormous amount of 

15           problems that were presented to New York 

16           State by this pandemic were huge, and UI was 

17           only part of it.  And, you know, the Governor 

18           has made decisions that she needed to make.  

19                  I just want to remind everyone about 

20           the pandemic.  When this pandemic hit, almost 

21           2 million people lost their jobs by the end 

22           of April.  They didn't do it because they 

23           wanted to; they were shut down.  We were the 

24           epicenter of the pandemic in this country.  


                                                                   115

 1           As somebody said to me, we were the bleeding 

 2           edge.  And we took it on the chin.  UI was 

 3           the only lifeline these people had.  And that 

 4           was job one in my agency, and I will never 

 5           apologize for that.

 6                  SENATOR RHOADS:  Not questioning, and 

 7           I'm not asking you to apologize for it.  We 

 8           took it on the chin in terms of our 

 9           workforce.

10                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  Yes.

11                  SENATOR RHOADS:  But our employers 

12           also took it on the chin.  They didn't shut 

13           their businesses down, we shut their 

14           businesses down.  

15                  And so now that this unemployment 

16           insurance has to be repaid, I think the state 

17           should have some increased responsibility in 

18           helping shoulder that burden, especially 

19           since we did receive COVID relief money which 

20           is now, in part, is what's funding a 

21           projected surplus that we have for this 

22           particular year.

23                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  And as I've 

24           said, we've reached out to federal partners, 


                                                                   116

 1           to other associations, to everybody who will 

 2           listen to us, to see if there's some way we 

 3           can make a dent on it.

 4                  SENATOR RHOADS:  Understood.

 5                  And just with respect to -- I guess 

 6           this would go to Commissioner -- I want to 

 7           pronounce your name correctly.

 8                  COMMISSIONER HOGUES:  Hogues.

 9                  SENATOR RHOADS:  Hogues, Commissioner 

10           Hogues.

11                  COMMISSIONER HOGUES:  Like 

12           stakeholder.

13                  (Laughter.)

14                  SENATOR RHOADS:  With -- with -- I 

15           appreciate that. 

16                  With respect to the Governor's plan 

17           for continuous recruitment testing, would 

18           that continuous recruitment testing be -- 

19           would police, fire, EMS personal be eligible 

20           for that continuous testing as well?  

21                  COMMISSIONER HOGUES:  Yes.

22                  SENATOR RHOADS:  Okay.  I appreciate 

23           it.  Thank you so much.

24                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.  


                                                                   117

 1                  Assembly.

 2                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Assemblyman 

 3           Jacobson.

 4                  ASSEMBLYMAN JACOBSON:  All right, 

 5           thank you, Madam Chair.  

 6                  And thank you all for your testimony.  

 7                  Just like we don't want to build a 

 8           bridge to nowhere, we don't want to have 

 9           training that leads nowhere and does not lead 

10           to good-paying jobs.  I do believe in the 

11           power of government to do good, but we must 

12           insist that our money is spent wisely.  

13           Otherwise, those who want spending by 

14           government will be met by the usual refrain:  

15           I told you so, it's just wasteful spending.  

16                  I also believe in effective workforce 

17           development.  This means talking to potential 

18           employers and unions and have them help to 

19           shape the curriculum.  This also means 

20           extensive follow-up on the results of the 

21           programs.  In order to ensure that these 

22           state dollars are well spent, we must insist 

23           on metrics to verify that the programs are 

24           working and successful, by requiring every 


                                                                   118

 1           entity receiving workforce development 

 2           dollars to provide data on an annual basis.  

 3                  And this data would include the 

 4           outreach that was done and how many persons 

 5           were actually reached; what organizations are 

 6           participating in the training, such as labor 

 7           unions and the Council of Industry; the type 

 8           of training and certification offered and 

 9           provided; how many people started the courses 

10           and how many completed them.  And of those 

11           who completed, how many became employed and 

12           at what wages.  How many of those who became 

13           employed are still working six, 12, 18 months 

14           and 24 months after becoming employed, and 

15           are they still working for the same employer 

16           or in the same field or otherwise, and what 

17           wages are they now receiving.

18                  I know I can talk to any union and 

19           find out this information about their own 

20           training and apprenticeship programs, but 

21           I've talked to too many groups, including 

22           workers at the Department of Labor, who could 

23           not give me this information.  We should 

24           demand this from all who receive workforce 


                                                                   119

 1           development money from the state.

 2                  There are numerous groups focused on 

 3           workforce development, but we lack the 

 4           metrics to determine if they are successful.  

 5           By adding this language in the budget, we can 

 6           make sure that every workforce development 

 7           dollar is being spent wisely and well.  I'm 

 8           not optimistic that this will happen, so I'm 

 9           introducing a bill to address this situation.

10                  Plus I have two quick points to make.  

11           One, when is there going to be real relief to 

12           the employers who are facing high surcharges, 

13           high unemployment insurance surcharges due to 

14           the pandemic, which is not their fault?  And 

15           secondly, on civil service, I was told by 

16           police departments that when they go to hire 

17           and they go down the list and they choose 

18           somebody and that person flunks the 

19           psychological evaluation, the person is still 

20           on the civil service list.  So that should be 

21           corrected.  

22                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you, 

23           Assemblyman, for your -- for your statement.

24                  (Laughter.)


                                                                   120

 1                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  And now to the 

 2           Senate.  

 3                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  It appears that 

 4           he has many questions he would like answered 

 5           after the fact.  So if you give him answers 

 6           through sending them in writing to Helene and 

 7           I, we will make sure that everyone on the 

 8           committees gets the answers.  Thank you.  

 9                  I don't need my 10 minutes, but I 

10           think I'm up next.  So I know this has been 

11           asked, but we keep getting a little different 

12           information.  So a follow-up question to 

13           Senator Mayer's follow-up to Senator Ramos's 

14           question about the home attendants and the 

15           money we worked so hard to get added to their 

16           salary, because we have a crisis in home care 

17           attendants.  And now you said that that was 

18           always intended to just, I guess, make sure 

19           that we were dealing with an immediate crisis 

20           and encourage people to come into the system.

21                  So where's your data showing they came 

22           into the system and we don't have a crisis 

23           anymore?  Because that's not what I'm seeing 

24           in my city.


                                                                   121

 1                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  Oh, I'm not 

 2           saying that there's no crisis.  I am saying 

 3           that according to the Center for Healthcare 

 4           Workforce Studies, there has been a 

 5           33 percent increase in home healthcare 

 6           workers since 2017, which is very good news.  

 7           That does not mean the crisis is gone.  

 8                  Part of the problem, as you well know, 

 9           is we are in an aging population and we have 

10           people -- more and more people who are going 

11           to need home care.  And we don't have enough 

12           workers so fulfill that need.  So it is -- we 

13           are attracting more people to the workforce, 

14           but we also have more aging people who need 

15           that care.  So that -- you know, that's kind 

16           of the situation that we're in.

17                  My understanding was that the $3 

18           increase was to stabilize the industry and 

19           increase the people coming into it.  It is 

20           technically above the minimum wage.  And so I 

21           would expect that as it approaches what the 

22           minimum wage indexed is, that you'd have 

23           another discussion:  Do you need to increase 

24           that bump, is the need still there?  


                                                                   122

 1                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  So I think that's 

 2           a later question, because we haven't 

 3           increased the minimum wage.  And we're just 

 4           looking at, right now, we gave them a bump to 

 5           try to increase participation and stabilize 

 6           the industry.  So you're telling me there's 

 7           data showing that between '17 and '23 that 

 8           there's been a 33 percent --

 9                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  According to 

10           what I have here.

11                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Okay.  So we 

12           didn't go down during the COVID period, we 

13           just have been on a straight line up on 

14           participation?

15                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  That I don't 

16           know.  So let me find out for you.  I'm just 

17           reading what they gave me, and I'll get more 

18           details for you. 

19                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  And you are 

20           right, of course, that the aging population 

21           continues to grow.  You know, it's good news 

22           about modernization of healthcare:  We are 

23           living longer, and we're being kept alive 

24           longer, which means there are more and more 


                                                                   123

 1           of us who actually hit the stages of life 

 2           that we refer to as the frail elderly.  

 3                  So I would also love to see on a chart 

 4           where we are in growth or plummets in home 

 5           care, where we are on growth in aging during 

 6           that same time period.  And if you possibly 

 7           can see where there are waiting lists and 

 8           demand -- because again, I'm from New York 

 9           City, and I can't speak for everybody in 

10           their districts, but I know that we literally 

11           have people who aren't allowed to leave 

12           hospitals because there are no home care 

13           workers available and discharge planning 

14           requires they have it.  That we have people 

15           who are literally calling my office every 

16           day, can I help them get some kind of home 

17           care because they've got nothing.  

18                  And so I just don't believe we have in 

19           any way, shape or form resolved the issues 

20           that justified our giving them a $3 

21           increase --

22                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  I would imagine 

23           that there's more to it than just the wages.  

24           So, you know, it is a bigger question which 


                                                                   124

 1           we could probably talk about offline for a 

 2           long time.  But, you know, the wages 

 3           definitely has helped.

 4                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  So if the wages 

 5           have helped and we still have a crisis, 

 6           taking away the wages seems to be 

 7           counterintuitive.  

 8                  And yes, we should be increasing 

 9           everyone's minimum wage.  And I suppose at 

10           some point in time we could even have a 

11           conversation about why are some jobs mandated 

12           above minimum wage, or should they be.  But I 

13           really don't feel that we've got to that 

14           point in our state yet at this point.  

15                  So I very much would love to see that 

16           data, because the Governor may have decided 

17           to do this but I don't think you actually 

18           believe this is a good idea.  And I think the 

19           data would back all of us up on that.

20                  And I'm going to give back my five 

21           minutes.  Thank you.  

22                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you.  

23                  So we're going to go to Assemblyman 

24           Slater for three minutes.


                                                                   125

 1                  ASSEMBLYMAN SLATER:  Thank you very 

 2           much.  

 3                  Good afternoon, good evening, whatever 

 4           time of the day it is.  It's great to see all 

 5           of you here.

 6                  Most of my questions actually were 

 7           asked earlier, so I'm kind of shooting from 

 8           the hip here.  But one of the things that I 

 9           saw in the Governor's proposed budget that 

10           troubled me deeply was her attempt to take 

11           away local zoning when it comes to some of 

12           the housing projects in the Hudson Valley and 

13           Long Island.  

14                  One of the things that I didn't see -- 

15           and I'm hoping you can clarify for me -- I 

16           didn't see any labor requirement specifically 

17           with regards to a PLA or a prevailing wage.  

18           Did you see that in her proposal?

19                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  No.

20                  ASSEMBLYMAN SLATER:  Is that in her 

21           proposal?

22                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  Not that I know 

23           of.

24                  ASSEMBLYMAN SLATER:  So there's no 


                                                                   126

 1           requirement in that regard to ensure a fair 

 2           wage on those projects.

 3                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  Not that I know 

 4           of.  

 5                  ASSEMBLYMAN SLATER:  Okay.  Thank you 

 6           very much.  I appreciate that.

 7                  Secondly, in regards to apprenticeship 

 8           programs, something I'm particularly 

 9           interested in is how can we better foster a 

10           dialogue and a pipeline between our school 

11           districts and bona fide apprenticeship 

12           programs?  I'm going to be visiting Putnam 

13           Northern Westchester BOCES tomorrow morning.

14                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  You're singing 

15           to me.

16                  ASSEMBLYMAN SLATER:  Yeah.  Well, I 

17           think it's something that's critically 

18           important.  Not everyone needs to go to 

19           college, and we need to make sure that we're 

20           obviously recognizing the importance that 

21           apprenticeship programs provide.

22                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  Here's the way 

23           I've learned to frame it.  When I first came 

24           into the DOL we talked about that was an 


                                                                   127

 1           alternative to college.  And one day I went, 

 2           This is an insult to the parents and the 

 3           young people that we're addressing.  It makes 

 4           them feel like they're lesser than.

 5                  ASSEMBLYMAN SLATER:  Hundred percent.

 6                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  It is an 

 7           alternative form of higher education.  And it 

 8           is as valuable as a college education.

 9                  ASSEMBLYMAN SLATER:  Yes.  Absolutely.

10                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  So I have 

11           worked extensively with the building trades 

12           and our apprenticeship folks to make sure 

13           that we are going into high schools.  We need 

14           to go into middle schools, because that's 

15           really where kids begin to get the idea, and 

16           expose them to what this is.  

17                  There are some wonderful 

18           pre-apprenticeship programs.  In New York 

19           City there's NEW, Nontraditional Employment 

20           for Women.  And women come in and they go 

21           through this program where they learn basic 

22           trades, it's a direct-entry program, they 

23           choose the apprenticeship they want to go 

24           into, and they're on a path for success.  


                                                                   128

 1                  We need more of that.  We need to 

 2           expose young people to this idea that working 

 3           with your hands is a gratifying career.  It's 

 4           not something other, it is fabulous.  But I'm 

 5           with you.

 6                  ASSEMBLYMAN SLATER:  I appreciate it 

 7           and look forward to having a more detailed 

 8           dialogue about ways that we can -- 

 9                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:   We can go to 

10           schools together.

11                  ASSEMBLYMAN SLATER:  That sounds 

12           great.  That sounds great.  

13                  Lastly, I just want to go back to a 

14           comment that was made in response to Senator 

15           Martins' question.  When it comes to wage 

16           theft, you're saying that you've never heard 

17           from the construction industry that it's a 

18           problem?  Because --

19                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  It's a problem, 

20           but I've never heard that we -- I mean, I 

21           never heard it stated that way.

22                  ASSEMBLYMAN SLATER:  Okay.  Well, I 

23           would again invite the conversation --

24                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  There's always 


                                                                   129

 1           wage theft.  There's always problems.

 2                  ASSEMBLYMAN SLATER:  I have two 

 3           business managers down in the Hudson Valley, 

 4           where I represent, Ed Cook being one of them.  

 5           And every conversation I have is about wage 

 6           theft and how there's a lack of enforcement 

 7           when it comes --

 8                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  And every time 

 9           they ask us we go and we investigate and we 

10           pull the wage records and we do what we need 

11           to do.  It's not that we don't talk to the 

12           labor unions.

13                  ASSEMBLYMAN SLATER:  If we could have 

14           a I think more detailed dialogue about that, 

15           I know that would go a long way.

16                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  Yup.  Yup.  

17           Happy to do it.

18                  ASSEMBLYMAN SLATER:  I'd appreciate 

19           it.  Thank you.

20                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  Thank you.

21                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Senate, any 

22           more? 

23                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.  We 

24           have a three-month -- three-minute follow-up 


                                                                   130

 1           by Senator Ramos.  

 2                  SENATOR RAMOS:  I'll take three 

 3           months.  That's great.

 4                  (Laughter.)

 5                  SENATOR RAMOS:  Thank you, Senator 

 6           Krueger.

 7                  Commissioner Reardon.

 8                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  Hey, Senator 

 9           Ramos.

10                  SENATOR RAMOS:  Construction injuries 

11           and deaths are on the rise and have been 

12           surpassing, actually, pre-pandemic levels.  

13           It's been a problem for a long time and why I 

14           created a Worker Fatal Registry that the DOL 

15           significantly delayed to implement.  And I 

16           was disappointed that they were unwilling to 

17           meet with our counsel, as we requested, to 

18           make sure that there was compliance.  Because 

19           as of right now, it's not.  

20                  The registry is finally posted, but it 

21           does not provide information about where a 

22           worker was killed and the circumstances 

23           surrounding their deaths.  How can we work 

24           together to improve this?


                                                                   131

 1                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  Was that in the 

 2           original law, was that required? 

 3                  SENATOR RAMOS:  It was.

 4                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  Okay, so then 

 5           we'll have a conversation about how to 

 6           improve the website.  

 7                  Part of -- as you know, part of 

 8           our significant problem -- and we welcomed 

 9           this regulation.  Part of our issue was that 

10           it fell on the county coroners and people 

11           like that to report the deaths to us.  We had 

12           no mechanism to force them to do that.

13                  So we have done extensive outreach.  

14           We have attended their conferences to talk to 

15           them as groups.  We have attended them -- we 

16           talk to them in their localities.  We've 

17           impressed upon them how important this 

18           information is.  And we are getting better 

19           compliance.  Right now our numbers for 

20           New York City are actually higher than the 

21           New York City numbers, because our staff is 

22           really trained to keep an eye on what's going 

23           on.

24                  SENATOR RAMOS:  All right.  I really 


                                                                   132

 1           appreciate that --

 2                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  It is irregular 

 3           across the state.

 4                  SENATOR RAMOS:  All right.  I really 

 5           appreciate that because the point of the 

 6           registry is to figure out patterns and 

 7           pinpoint improvements to working conditions 

 8           that need to be made.

 9                  I have time for one more.  In 2016 the 

10           Joint Task Force to Fight Worker Exploitation 

11           and Employee Misclassification was 

12           established.  However, the previous Governor 

13           eliminated the yearly report that had 

14           initially been required.  So in addition to 

15           being a blatant issue of transparency for 

16           New Yorkers, how do we expect the task force 

17           to be successful and their recommendations to 

18           be implemented without a yearly report?

19                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  If you'd like a 

20           yearly report, you probably should tell us to 

21           do it.

22                  SENATOR RAMOS:  Please do it.  I can 

23           tell you more formally as well.

24                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  Okay.  Thank 


                                                                   133

 1           you.

 2                  SENATOR RAMOS:  All right.

 3                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Assembly.  

 4                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  We go to 

 5           Assemblyman Ardila.

 6                  ASSEMBLYMAN ARDILA:  (Mic off.)  Thank 

 7           you so much.  Nice to see you, Commissioner.

 8                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  Thank you.

 9                  ASSEMBLYMAN ARDILA:  My district is a 

10           waterfront district.  We have communities in 

11           Long Island City facing the East River, 

12           communities in Maspeth facing the 

13           Newtown Creek.  What can we do in terms of 

14           enhancing climate-resilient projects to 

15           combat storms and floodings throughout the 

16           state?  

17                  And Part B, how can we ensure that we 

18           are upholding goals set out by the Climate 

19           Leadership and Community Protection Act so 

20           that employers within the renewable energy 

21           sector are the ones getting government 

22           subsidies for prevailing wages and worker 

23           protections?

24                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  So interesting 


                                                                   134

 1           question.  Of course I don't -- I'm not the 

 2           agency that oversees the resiliency part.  I 

 3           think that's probably NYSERDA and DEC.  But 

 4           happy to work with them.

 5                  Our charge is to make sure that we are 

 6           training workers in the clean energy sector.  

 7           And I'm very happy to say that the Just 

 8           Energy Transition Office will be at the DOL, 

 9           because that's what we do.  We train workers, 

10           and we're very happy to do that.  

11                  I want to make sure that workers 

12           across the state have opportunities to work 

13           and thrive in those sectors, including in 

14           your district, where you obviously are 

15           challenged by rising water.

16                  Specifically to make sure that you're 

17           being compliant with the --

18                  ASSEMBLYMAN ARDILA:  Superstorms, 

19           actually, not just rising water.

20                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  Yeah, I know 

21           everything.

22                  ASSEMBLYMAN ARDILA:  Ida -- yeah.

23                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  Yeah.  It's 

24           bad.  It's not getting better.


                                                                   135

 1                  You know, as to the compliance with 

 2           the CLCPA, again, it's not something I 

 3           oversee.  But I'm sure the DEC and NYSERDA 

 4           would be very happy to help you with that.  

 5                  But when it comes to the workforce 

 6           part of it, we would love to be a part of it.  

 7           You know, we are very interested in making 

 8           sure that people who live in those 

 9           neighborhoods also get to participate in the 

10           work.

11                  ASSEMBLYMAN ARDILA:  I appreciate 

12           that.  Because we want to make sure that 

13           folks aren't being -- you know, they are 

14           getting prevailing wages, that they are 

15           getting -- the PLAs are being met and 

16           protections are being upheld.  

17                  And now I do want to piggyback off of 

18           Senator Ramos's previous question, shifting gears 

19           into home healthcare workers.  If it took the 

20           minimum wage to increase to $18, a $3 increase, 

21           in order to attract home care workers, why are we 

22           not keeping that $3 increase?

23                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  That is not a 

24           question that my agency can answer.  But, you 


                                                                   136

 1           know, I think that it was put there 

 2           specifically to -- again, to stabilize and 

 3           draw people back into that form of 

 4           employment.

 5                  I think the home care worker situation, as 

 6           I said earlier, is bigger than wages.  There are 

 7           a lot of different issues around why people are 

 8           not doing it.  It's very hard work.

 9                  ASSEMBLYMAN ARDILA:  It is hard work.  

10           That's why we should keep it.

11                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  It often is 

12           done by immigrants, many of whom have been 

13           excluded from our country, so that's a 

14           dwindling resource.  But there's a lot of 

15           issues --

16                  ASSEMBLYMAN ARDILA:  Many of which are 

17           in my district.

18                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  Yes.  Yeah.

19                  And anything we can do to help that 

20           industry, to help secure those workers' safe 

21           conditions and a good wage, we're happy to 

22           do.

23                  ASSEMBLYMAN ARDILA:  So let's fight to 

24           keep -- to raise the wage for them.


                                                                   137

 1                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  Okay.

 2                  ASSEMBLYMAN ARDILA:  All right.  thank 

 3           you.

 4                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.  

 5                  Senator Robert Jackson for a 

 6           three-minute follow-up as chair.

 7                  SENATOR JACKSON:  Thank you.  

 8                  Commissioner Hogues, I got three items 

 9           I want to touch base with you on.  One, 

10           regarding 55B and 55C programs, the Governor 

11           proposed an increase from 1200 to 1700 

12           positions.  Do you have any insight on that?

13                  COMMISSIONER HOGUES:  Yes.  So for the 

14           first in the program's history, we are 

15           approaching that 1200 mark.  And to make sure 

16           that we are offering an inclusive workforce, 

17           we have asked to increase that by 500, to 

18           1700 positions.  Because like I said, we are 

19           bumping up against that number.  

20                  So that said, the agencies have been 

21           doing a great job of making jobs available to 

22           individuals with disabilities.

23                  SENATOR JACKSON:  We're talking 

24           about these are people with disabilities, on 


                                                                   138

 1           the one hand, under 55B, and veterans with 

 2           disabilities on 55C.  Is that correct?  

 3                  COMMISSIONER HOGUES:  That's correct.

 4                  SENATOR JACKSON:  Okay.  Well, I 

 5           support this also.  And I just wanted to -- 

 6           my staff will follow up with you on some 

 7           details about that, okay?

 8                  COMMISSIONER HOGUES:  Thank you so 

 9           much.  

10                  SENATOR JACKSON:  The second one is 

11           the extension of the waiver.  The 

12           Executive -- the Governor's proposing a 

13           one-year extension of the waiver of the 

14           income cap for retirees to return to work in 

15           school settings.  Because it's hard to 

16           recruit people, and they would have to give 

17           up part of their pension benefits.  And so 

18           the Governor is proposing this.  

19                  I support it.  But I'm going to ask 

20           you to follow up with my staff about the 

21           details as to how many have taken advantage 

22           of this, so forth and so on.

23                  COMMISSIONER HOGUES:  We certainly 

24           will do that.


                                                                   139

 1                  SENATOR JACKSON:  And the last one is 

 2           the special accident or death benefits for 

 3           individuals.  So currently municipalities pay 

 4           a special accidental death benefit for 

 5           people -- families of deceased police, fire, 

 6           emergency medical techs of the New York City 

 7           Health + Hospitals Corp., and uniformed 

 8           officers of the NYC Housing Authority, 

 9           New York City Transit, Department of 

10           Corrections, Bridge and Tunnels, so forth and 

11           so on.  

12                  And the Governor is proposing to 

13           include counties in this list.  Do you have 

14           any insight on that at this point in time?  

15                  COMMISSIONER HOGUES:  I don't.  So I 

16           apologize.  That is something that we will 

17           have to follow up on.

18                  SENATOR JACKSON:  This is something we 

19           will follow up with you.  But obviously 

20           accidental death is accidental death.  And I 

21           support dealing with individuals in our 

22           employment that are looking after our safety 

23           and security, their accidental death 

24           benefits.  So my staff will follow up with 


                                                                   140

 1           you.

 2                  COMMISSIONER HOGUES:  Thank you.

 3                  SENATOR JACKSON:  Madam Chairs, thank 

 4           you very much for the additional time.

 5                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

 6                  Assembly.  

 7                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Assemblyman 

 8           Durso.  

 9                  ASSEMBLYMAN DURSO:  Good evening, I 

10           think.  Soon, right?  Thank you, everybody, 

11           for being here.  

12                  So I just had a couple of quick 

13           questions, first for Commissioner Hogues with 

14           Civil Service, a follow-up to something 

15           Assemblyman DeStefano was talking about.  

16           Just when you talk about recruitment, 

17           bringing people into civil service working 

18           for the state, working for local government, 

19           even if it's our local municipalities.  As 

20           someone who came from that, worked as a 

21           sanitation worker for 15 years --

22                  COMMISSIONER HOGUES:  Thank you so 

23           much.

24                  ASSEMBLYMAN DURSO:  Please, I loved 


                                                                   141

 1           it.  Sometimes I wish I was still there.

 2                  (Laughter.)

 3                  ASSEMBLYMAN DURSO:  But in regards to 

 4           that, so we -- he brought up a little bit 

 5           changes to NYSHIP where we talked about 

 6           Tier 6 or paying into retirement for longer 

 7           periods of time, or paying into the rising 

 8           costs of healthcare that now some of the 

 9           workers have to do.

10                  Do you think it makes it harder to 

11           recruit people to take those civil service 

12           jobs that Joe spoke about -- you take these 

13           jobs initially because you know you're not 

14           getting rich, you know you're not making that 

15           certain level of money, but you have your 

16           retirement, you have your health benefits, 

17           you have a solid job that's protected.

18                  But now with obviously private 

19           industry coming in -- which it's always 

20           there -- but we want people, qualified people 

21           to work for the state and in civil service, 

22           do you think it's going to be harder to find 

23           those people to do those jobs when your 

24           salary range hasn't changed that much, or 


                                                                   142

 1           really hasn't kept up with the times, on top 

 2           of it paying into your healthcare more, 

 3           paying into your retirement more?  And as 

 4           someone that came from the sanitation 

 5           department, now you have to be there till 

 6           you're 65 years old.  In all honesty, I'm 43.  

 7           I could not work till I was 65 years old in 

 8           the back of a truck.

 9                  So what are we doing to recruit people 

10           to those jobs, keep them, you know, retain 

11           them, but also understanding the needs of 

12           each individual civil service job throughout 

13           the state?

14                  COMMISSIONER HOGUES:  So once again, 

15           we are looking at that, and I appreciate the 

16           question.  We are looking at an opportunity 

17           to do a study to modernize the civil service 

18           pay structure, which is critical.  We've done 

19           stuff over the past to increase salaries and 

20           offer regional differentials.  

21                  But the other thing that we have to 

22           realize is that the increased cost is not 

23           something that is unique to state government.  

24           So private sectors are experiencing the same 


                                                                   143

 1           increased costs in healthcare benefits and 

 2           the sort.

 3                  ASSEMBLYMAN DURSO:  But that was one 

 4           of the reasons, like we said, there was 

 5           always that same thing of I'm taking this job 

 6           because of my future.  Right?  It was the 

 7           retirement, it was the health benefits, it 

 8           was the fact that maybe you could retire in 

 9           20, 25 years, possibly, without too bad of a 

10           limp.  

11                  Now, you know, working that much 

12           longer, the pay structure not going up as 

13           high as it probably should, not keeping up 

14           with all the essentials that you have to now 

15           pay into, I think recruiting qualified 

16           candidates and keeping them is going to be 

17           very difficult.

18                  COMMISSIONER HOGUES:  So there's a 

19           couple of quick things there.  So there's a 

20           sense of job security.  Once you get in a 

21           competitive position, you have the 

22           opportunity to advance throughout state 

23           government.  And state government is a huge 

24           employer.  So you can go and see a number of 


                                                                   144

 1           things.  You can start out in Parks and end 

 2           up in DMV.  And so it's a huge opportunity.  

 3           I'd love to talk to you about it.

 4                  ASSEMBLYMAN DURSO:  Thank you.  

 5                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you.

 6                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  I think the 

 7           Senate is done, so back to the Assembly.  

 8                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  So we have a 

 9           number of Assemblymembers.  

10                  Assemblyman Jones.

11                  ASSEMBLYMAN JONES:  Good afternoon, 

12           evening, whatever it is.  Thank you all for 

13           being here and answering these questions.  

14           Thank you for all your work.

15                  Commissioner Hogues, we need -- first 

16           of all, I want to ask, how old is civil 

17           service?  How long has it been in place?

18                  COMMISSIONER HOGUES:  I apologize, I 

19           don't have that answer with -- 

20                  ASSEMBLYMAN JONES:  Okay, because we 

21           were just talking about it up here and we --

22                  COMMISSIONER HOGUES:  It's old.

23                  ASSEMBLYMAN JONES:  It's old.  

24                  I guess my point around that is I have 


                                                                   145

 1           municipalities, I have counties, I have 

 2           state -- I represent a lot of state workers 

 3           as well.  Don't you think we need an upgrade 

 4           or a rehaul of our civil service?  Because I 

 5           say that and if I hear from another agency, 

 6           municipality, whatever that says, Hey, you 

 7           know, we've hired a great worker, you know, 

 8           they're doing a good job, they have to take 

 9           the civil service test, they didn't place in 

10           the top three.  They've been working here for 

11           nine, 10 months, we all love them, great job.  

12           And we lost them.  

13                  And a lot of times when they take that 

14           test, it has nothing to do with their job.  

15           And certainly it doesn't have anything to do 

16           with the job performance that they've been 

17           doing.

18                  So my question is, what are we doing 

19           to address that?  I know there's waivers and 

20           such in place.  But what are we doing to 

21           address that?  

22                  And I do have a second question.  I 

23           think you -- I don't know if I misheard it.  

24           You were saying something about the counties, 


                                                                   146

 1           because the county structure is they take 

 2           care of the school districts, at least in 

 3           upstate -- take care of the school districts, 

 4           take care of the municipalities, take care of 

 5           obviously their county employees and 

 6           municipalities.

 7                  You said there's a lot of flexibility 

 8           they have there?  Because they're always 

 9           blaming the state, honestly.  

10                  COMMISSIONER HOGUES:  Of course they 

11           do.  

12                  (Laughter.)

13                  ASSEMBLYMAN JONES:  I'd like to hear a 

14           little more about that, but I really do want 

15           to know about what we're doing to overhaul 

16           civil service.  Because it just seems 

17           antiquated and not addressing the workforce 

18           that we need in those certain positions.

19                  COMMISSIONER HOGUES:  So in the 

20           submitted testimony we talked a lot about the 

21           modernization of civil service, the 

22           opportunity to look at how individuals enter 

23           into state government.  

24                  And so yes, we do need to change to be 


                                                                   147

 1           competitive with the private sector and just 

 2           to be attractive to individuals that are 

 3           entering into the workforce.

 4                  ASSEMBLYMAN JONES:  And let's face it, 

 5           not everybody's a great test-taker.  You 

 6           know, it's just --

 7                  COMMISSIONER HOGUES:  And I agree.  So 

 8           some of the things that we've done is we've 

 9           switched from where you're filling in the 

10           bubbles to a training and experience.  And so 

11           our most recent PCO, professional career 

12           opportunities, where a lot of individuals get 

13           their entrance into state government, we 

14           switched that.  In 2019 it was fill in the 

15           bubble; in 2022 it was a T&E.  And we've 

16           started to do preliminary studies against 

17           those that took it in 2019 and 2022, and 

18           we've seen that those that took it in 2022, 

19           versus 2019, have done better.  And we could 

20           talk more about --  

21                  ASSEMBLYMAN JONES:  And I'd love to -- 

22           the flexibility, can we talk about that 

23           online -- or offline?  And I can get ahold of 

24           you on that, because -- 


                                                                   148

 1                  COMMISSIONER HOGUES:  Yes.  Yes.

 2                  ASSEMBLYMAN JONES:  That would be 

 3           great.  Thank you.

 4                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Assemblywoman 

 5           Zinerman.

 6                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN ZINERMAN:  Good evening, 

 7           everyone.  Thank you all for being here and 

 8           answering our questions.

 9                  I want to talk about the elephant in 

10           the room.  Unemployment in the Black 

11           community is a deep-rooted issue with no real 

12           solutions identified to tackle the problem.  

13           Since the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics 

14           first started collecting data in 1972, it has 

15           generally been twice the rate of white 

16           workers.  And we know that this was 

17           exacerbated throughout the pandemic.

18                  So I have three questions for you.  

19           What if any equity initiatives have you or 

20           are you employing to address double-digit 

21           unemployment among this group?  

22                  The second question has to do with the 

23           recruitment, because we've talking about 

24           recruitment a lot.  And this is something I'd 


                                                                   149

 1           really like to be a partner with you on.  But 

 2           the question is this.  Who's your target 

 3           audience when you're recruiting?  You're 

 4           talking about different recruitment 

 5           strategies and you're talking about 

 6           recruiting for state jobs and specific titles 

 7           that we have experience and workforce 

 8           shortages in.  

 9                  But what is your recruitment plan to 

10           retain workers that we're losing?  And again, 

11           Black workers are leaving the state 

12           departments as well, and the city and 

13           federal, if you think about it.  And also, 

14           what are we doing to recruit new ones?  And I 

15           think -- how much time do I have?  

16                  Okay, good.  I think I have a -- I 

17           want to ask and talk about -- career pathways 

18           is something that I'm working on in my 

19           district.  I think high school really is too 

20           late to start talking to people about jobs 

21           and especially jobs in the state.  

22                  So if we could just talk about what 

23           you're doing around equity initiatives for 

24           Black workers, how are we recruiting them, 


                                                                   150

 1           how are we going to get them employed, how 

 2           are we going to reduce this number?

 3                  COMMISSIONER HOGUES:  So we're talking 

 4           state workforce?  

 5                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN ZINERMAN:  Everybody.  I 

 6           want everybody to join in.

 7                  COMMISSIONER HOGUES:  Okay.  I will 

 8           jump in gladly, and thank you for that.  

 9                  We have a division, ODIM -- diversity, 

10           management, inclusion -- that has kicked off 

11           a campaign to reach out to the underserved 

12           population.  One of the things that we've 

13           done is we've partnered up with the NAACP, 

14           who has a --

15                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN ZINERMAN:  I'm a 

16           card-carrying member.

17                  COMMISSIONER HOGUES:  All right, thank 

18           you so much.  You should hear about it -- to 

19           do those outreaches into those -- the 

20           populations, into the communities, on a 

21           ground -- boots-on-the-ground-type level.  

22           Because we know that individuals, all 

23           individuals aren't on social media and get 

24           their information that way.  And that we know 


                                                                   151

 1           that we need to get trusted individuals in 

 2           certain communities to say, Hey, it's okay, 

 3           to provide them with the information when the 

 4           tests are going to be and also, once again, 

 5           educate them on the how.  How do you get in, 

 6           and how do you do that?  

 7                  We also have -- we focus on career 

 8           advancement and the retention of individuals.  

 9           Our department is responsible for holding 

10           cultural events, which we just held a Black 

11           History Month event that was attended by 

12           multiple agencies and over 500 individuals 

13           online.  

14                  And so we can have that conversation 

15           because it's dear to my heart.

16                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN ZINERMAN:  It should be 

17           to all of our hearts.

18                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you --

19                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  And I'll talk 

20           to you offline.  We do it too.

21                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN ZINERMAN:  Okay.

22                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Assemblywoman 

23           Lucas.

24                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LUCAS:  We almost had 


                                                                   152

 1           the same questions, Stefani.

 2                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN ZINERMAN:  Ask it again, 

 3           because I still have some follow-up.

 4                  (Laughter.)

 5                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LUCAS:  Just wanted to 

 6           know a little bit more about the investment 

 7           in the GAINS program.  Which you may or may 

 8           not have.

 9                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  Which one?

10                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LUCAS:  It's Growing 

11           Apprenticeship in Nontraditional Sectors, or 

12           emerging technologies.  And being able to 

13           pull out of career pathways, wage subsidy 

14           programs, EBT ventures.  This is where we can 

15           extract a number of -- or grow the workforce.

16                  Additionally, we spoke about -- you 

17           spoke about, Commissioner, boots on the 

18           ground.  Is there any intention to invest in 

19           incubators in these neighborhoods that are 

20           typically unnoticed?  Because I'm in the 

21           60th Assembly District, which is East 

22           New York, Brownsville, Canarsie.  And we are 

23           one of the highest when it comes to 

24           unemployment.  So when we're talking about 


                                                                   153

 1           all of these wonderful things, I don't see 

 2           these things in our communities and I don't 

 3           see any outreach.  

 4                  So could you give me a little bit more 

 5           information about what I just asked?  

 6                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  So we do a lot 

 7           of work to make sure that underserved 

 8           communities understand that we are here for 

 9           everybody.  And I said earlier, we meet our 

10           customers where they are.  You don't have to 

11           fit in a box of any kind to access our help.  

12                  We have made a concerted effort over 

13           the last couple of years to make sure that -- 

14           I have a personal thing.  If I open a door 

15           and look in --

16                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LUCAS:  -- one minute 

17           and 12.

18                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  Okay.  If I 

19           don't see myself in that room, I'm not going 

20           to go in that room.  So we are changing that 

21           dynamic.  We want to make sure that young 

22           people see themselves in these careers and 

23           understand they can be powerful --

24                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LUCAS:  So is there an 


                                                                   154

 1           investment in a growing apprenticeship for 

 2           nontraditional sectors and emerging 

 3           technology?

 4                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  We are 

 5           definitely growing the apprenticeship 

 6           programs as much as we can.  It requires 

 7           sponsors who are employers.  But I can talk 

 8           to you offline about that.

 9                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LUCAS:  Absolutely, 

10           because I definitely have that.  

11                  Additionally, in terms of pulling out 

12           of these different areas with career 

13           pathways, wage subsidy programs and SNAP, as 

14           well as making a key investment in incubators 

15           in these spaces.

16                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  The incubators 

17           is not something we would do.  It might be 

18           something that maybe ESD might do, they have 

19           a -- let me think about it.  But we have 

20           Career Centers.  We do a lot of outreach.  

21           Let me talk to you offline about it, because 

22           it is a personal passion of mine.

23                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LUCAS:  I would 

24           appreciate that.  Because  this is a way that 


                                                                   155

 1           we can pull people in, on the ground, 

 2           real-time, and train trainers.

 3                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  Yes.

 4                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LUCAS:  Thank you.  

 5                  COMMISSIONER HOGUES:  So one of the 

 6           reasons why we're trying to be at DOL centers 

 7           is so we can have that presence.  But we also 

 8           need your help to let individuals know that 

 9           these opportunities are available.

10                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LUCAS:  I'm all in.

11                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  Good.  Thank 

12           you.  

13                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you.  

14                  Assemblyman Ra.

15                  ASSEMBLYMAN RA:  Thank you.

16                  Commissioner, thank you for the call 

17           yesterday.

18                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  My pleasure.

19                  ASSEMBLYMAN RA:  We've started to look 

20           through your response regarding the UI fraud, 

21           and as we go through the background materials 

22           we'll reach out and maybe we'll set up a 

23           meeting so we can --

24                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  It's a lot, I 


                                                                   156

 1           know.  

 2                  ASSEMBLYMAN RA:  So thank you.  I 

 3           appreciate your response.

 4                  I wanted to just get into a little bit 

 5           as -- right, we talked about it, but now 

 6           we're talking about modernization, hopefully 

 7           finding ways that are going to update the 

 8           system and prevent some of these things in 

 9           the future.  So can you tell me, as we're 

10           implementing this, is the state looking at 

11           its data sources and whether as part of the 

12           modernization we're looking into sources that 

13           might have current unemployment and income 

14           data, as opposed to just relying on state 

15           wage data?

16                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  I'm sorry, ask 

17           me the question again.  I didn't get it. 

18                  ASSEMBLYMAN RA:  Are you looking at 

19           other -- maybe utilizing other sources of 

20           data when you're trying to verify claims?  

21           Like there's, you know, clearinghouses and 

22           things out there that --

23                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  So an 

24           individual's claim?  The only way we're set 


                                                                   157

 1           up right now is we pull -- we contact the 

 2           employer and we ask them to give us their 

 3           wage data.  

 4                  So that was part of the problem during 

 5           the pandemic.  For PUA, there were no 

 6           employers, there were no records to pull, and 

 7           we didn't have any way to verify 1.5 million 

 8           people who were getting benefits had actually 

 9           been employed the way they said they were.

10                  But the way the law reads for UI in 

11           New York State is you have to have an 

12           employer, and we contact them about your 

13           employment and we contact them for your wage 

14           data.  That's the way the law is written.  So 

15           we'd have to change that law.

16                  ASSEMBLYMAN RA:  Okay.  I understand.  

17           It's something that's come up I think in a 

18           number of different, you know, programs 

19           throughout the pandemic, because there are 

20           these data sources out there that might be 

21           able to more quickly --

22                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  But this is 

23           this person's individual employment.  So it 

24           wouldn't be in a --


                                                                   158

 1                  ASSEMBLYMAN RA:  But that have -- they 

 2           keep data on consumers and all that type of 

 3           stuff.  And, you know, in modernization it 

 4           might be something we can look into.

 5                  The other thing I wanted to -- hold on 

 6           one second.  Sorry.  I had something here, 

 7           I'm sorry.  I actually -- actually, no, not 

 8           for you, Commissioner.  Well, thank you.  

 9                  I did want to ask regarding GOERS and 

10           training within the department.  You know, we 

11           saw some reports earlier this year and in the 

12           fall regarding the implementation amongst the 

13           state workforce of things like sexual 

14           harassment training and diversity training 

15           and ethics training and all that type of 

16           stuff that I think we're all used to going 

17           through, and legislative staffers are going 

18           through, and a very small number having gone 

19           through it.  

20                  Do you have any information as to like 

21           the executive chamber workforce?  Have most 

22           undergone that training?  Because it was a 

23           problem in the previous administration.

24                  DIRECTOR VOLFORTE:  My understanding 


                                                                   159

 1           is that the entire executive chamber 

 2           workforce has undergone live training.  

 3                  And I believe the report you're 

 4           speaking about is -- they transitioned from 

 5           the training of about 120,000 state employees 

 6           who have been trained, and they train 

 7           annually online, to ethics training through 

 8           that new government body, which is not 

 9           handled by me, and live sexual harassment 

10           training, which we are in the process of -- 

11           to make that transition.  We're about to 

12           start enrolling individuals and up to 

13           300 trainers to train them to train the state 

14           workforce live.  But we'll also continue to 

15           offer other training models to ensure that 

16           folks are trained.

17                  ASSEMBLYMAN RA:  Thank you.

18                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  So I think I'm 

19           last, with a few questions.  And, 

20           Commissioner -- okay.  Well, I'll go first 

21           and then Jo Anne.  Sorry, I didn't see.

22                  So Commissioner Reardon, I just want 

23           to talk a little bit about unemployment data 

24           relating to youth.  So the headline 


                                                                   160

 1           unemployment rate has come down from the 

 2           highs of the pandemic years, but obviously 

 3           not all New Yorkers nor all regions have 

 4           fared equally.  

 5                  So we know that the unemployment rates 

 6           for youth 16 to 24 have not returned to the 

 7           pre-pandemic levels.  And I was wondering if 

 8           you have any thoughts on what factors we can 

 9           attribute this to.

10                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  It is a thorny 

11           problem.  You know, it is very important for 

12           young people to be engaged in work at a 

13           relatively early age if they're going to be 

14           successful in the workplace, because it's -- 

15           you know, it's part of your learning.  

16                  Some young people are in school, so 

17           they're not working.  Some young people are 

18           working in the gig economy, so they may not 

19           be reported in public data and it's a little 

20           hard to find that information.  We do have 

21           records of more people becoming 

22           entrepreneurial, and perhaps some of them did 

23           that.  But there's not one answer to it.  

24                  It is very important that we get young 


                                                                   161

 1           people when they leave school, or even before 

 2           they leave school, to begin to work so that 

 3           that's part of who they are.  We do an 

 4           enormous amount of work with our workforce 

 5           development people trying to reach 

 6           particularly young people about career paths.  

 7           As I said, we are out-stationing our senior 

 8           staff now across the state in our Career 

 9           Centers for days at a time so we can connect 

10           with communities and find out what's going on 

11           in that community and how can we impact it.  

12                  We are working very closely with 

13           Betty Rosa at State Ed, and all of her BOCES 

14           superintendents and those people, to find out 

15           how can we work more closely with them.  How 

16           can we connect young people to registered 

17           apprenticeships, because those are wonderful 

18           ways to get people into training.  But a lot 

19           of it is if you're -- what is your path?  And 

20           how can we connect you to something that's 

21           meaningful so you're not just bouncing from a 

22           fast food restaurant job to, I don't know, a 

23           bicycle delivery job or something.  

24                  We want to give them a clear path into 


                                                                   162

 1           their adulthood.  And it's not one size fits 

 2           all.  It's different in every community.  As 

 3           the member said about a Black community, 

 4           that's a very different equation.  You know, 

 5           and we need to make sure we have people who 

 6           look like them, who can speak to them and 

 7           help them find the answers.  

 8                  But we are very focused on helping 

 9           young people find careers that they love, 

10           that they can thrive in.  They're the future.  

11           And it's an important part of what the agency 

12           does.

13                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  So in order for 

14           us to work together to help these young 

15           people, I know that the reporting shows the 

16           category of 16-to-24.  And obviously there 

17           are very different needs for those on the 

18           younger portion of that scale to those on the 

19           high portion.

20                  And I was wondering if your agency can 

21           report the labor force data on a more 

22           granular level, but just separate out some of 

23           that age difference.  And along with that, 

24           the data on the website shows labor force 


                                                                   163

 1           demographics by the state's regions, but it's 

 2           only on a five-year-estimate basis.  And the 

 3           latest one when we just looked at it the 

 4           other day, is from 2017 to 2021.  Which 

 5           obviously, again, in terms of trying to set 

 6           policy, doesn't really --

 7                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  It's not 

 8           helpful.

 9                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  -- really 

10           inform us as to what's going on.  

11                  So I'm wondering if there's a reason 

12           why we can't do that on a yearly or a 

13           biyearly basis, and also in terms of breaking 

14           the age group down.

15                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  I am guessing 

16           that some of it has to do with the way the 

17           federal government reports things, because 

18           that often drives the way that we report 

19           things.  But I'm not sure about that. 

20                  But I would certainly be very happy to 

21           go back to my research and policy folks and 

22           say, you know, can we look at doing this 

23           differently.  Because I agree, a 16-year-old 

24           is very different from a 23-year-old.


                                                                   164

 1                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Okay.  So, you 

 2           know, we would look forward to working with 

 3           the department and trying to figure out ways 

 4           that we could get better information so that 

 5           we can help direct programming and funds.

 6                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  Governments 

 7           tend to lump people into groups, and we 

 8           should pull them apart and look at them in 

 9           a -- you're right, in a more granular way.

10                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you so 

11           much.  

12                  So now I want to call on Assemblywoman 

13           Simon to ask a question, three minutes.

14                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN SIMON:  Thank you both 

15           very much -- all three of you.  

16                  So I have a series of questions.  One 

17           is how quickly will the DOL modernization of 

18           the equipment be done.

19                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  Our aim is to 

20           roll it out the end of this year.  

21                  However, I want to say to everybody 

22           clearly today, this system will not go live 

23           until it is completely tested.  We know of 

24           other states that have failed because they 


                                                                   165

 1           did not test their systems.  I will not allow 

 2           it to fail our citizens.  So the end of the 

 3           year, but it's got to be tested.

 4                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN SIMON:  Okay.  I think 

 5           you've heard about -- unemployment issues 

 6           still remain, so I'd like to follow up with 

 7           you.

 8                  But the other issue I have for both 

 9           Department of Labor and Civil Service is 

10           workers with disabilities, recruiting, how 

11           accessible the -- just applying that 

12           technology is to them, how accessible are the 

13           tests themselves.  When you're updating them, 

14           how are you doing it?  Who are you working 

15           with to update those tests?  

16                  And then the accessibility of 

17           apprenticeship programs as well, if you could 

18           address those issues.

19                  COMMISSIONER HOGUES:  I'll give 

20           Commissioner Reardon a break.  She's been 

21           talking quite a bit.  

22                  So we work very closely with the 

23           state's first-ever Chief Disability Officer 

24           to look at how we can be more appropriate and 


                                                                   166

 1           precise in how we recruit.  Our office of 

 2           ODIM is very active in not only our agency 

 3           but working with other agencies to make sure 

 4           that we are sensitive to that.  

 5                  We work with community-based 

 6           organizations that represent individuals with 

 7           disabilities, to inform us.  We have an 

 8           open-door policy where we listen and we make 

 9           adjustments appropriately.  As you've heard, 

10           we've increased our 55B program.  We're 

11           requesting an increase in our 55B program by 

12           500 individuals because agencies are getting 

13           it and we're working together to improve 

14           that.  

15                  And we're always looking at 

16           accessibility.  One of the quick things that 

17           I'll talk about is that's why it's necessary 

18           for us to have state-operated testing 

19           facilities.  So when you talk about access, 

20           sometimes in schools, in other areas, we 

21           couldn't -- we're not in control of that.  So 

22           when we look at our state-operated 

23           facilities, we have control of that to make 

24           sure they're accessible.


                                                                   167

 1                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN SIMON:  By the way, 

 2           Civil Service started in May of 1883.  I just 

 3           thought I'd let you know.

 4                  (Laughter.)

 5                  COMMISSIONER HOGUES:  Thank you so 

 6           much.  

 7                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  So very 

 8           quickly, we work with a very extensive 

 9           network of --

10                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN SIMON:  The tech is 

11           accessible?  That's another issue, is 

12           assistive technology.

13                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  Yes.  We have 

14           assistive technology in every Career Center.  

15           All of our counselors are trained on it.  All 

16           of our website is accessible.  

17                  We have -- we meet them where they 

18           are.  Regardless of what their issue is, we 

19           want to make sure that we serve them, soup to 

20           nuts.  Everything that we do for everybody, 

21           we do for people with disabilities.  They are 

22           treated exactly the same.  

23                  But we have a very extensive network 

24           of connection across the state, and it is 


                                                                   168

 1           very robust and we work very hard to ensure 

 2           that people with disabilities are also put on 

 3           career paths.

 4                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN SIMON:  Thank you.

 5                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you.

 6                  So we have exhausted ourselves and all 

 7           of the questions.  

 8                  (Laughter.)

 9                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  So thank you, 

10           Commissioners, for being here, Director.  And 

11           I know there are some follow-up questions 

12           that you'll be able to get to both of us.

13                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Great.  Thank 

14           you.

15                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:  Thank you very 

16           much.

17                  COMMISSIONER HOGUES:  Thank you.  

18                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Yes, everybody 

19           can take a stretch as I call the next panel 

20           up:  The Retired Public Employees 

21           Association; Organization of New York State 

22           Management Confidential Employees; CSEA Local 

23           1000 AFSCME; and Public Employees Federation.

24                  And then if people want to continue 


                                                                   169

 1           talking to those three -- two commissioners 

 2           and director, take those conversations 

 3           outside.  Thank you.

 4                  (Off the record.)

 5                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  All right.  If 

 6           the conversations can go out in the hallway 

 7           and we can start up the next panel.  Thank 

 8           you.  I know it's a long day for everyone.  

 9           And when you do two hearings on one day, they 

10           never work out the timewise you thought.

11                  So let's just start off by -- one, I 

12           want to reference that apparently for PEF we 

13           have Randi DiAntonio, vice president.  Okay.  

14                  MS. DiANTONIO:  Thank you.

15                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Hi, welcome.

16                  But why don't we start with 

17           Ed Farrell.  Hi.

18                  MR. FARRELL:  Thank you.  Chairwomen 

19           Krueger and Weinstein, thank you for the 

20           opportunity.  I'm Ed Farrell.  I'm the 

21           executive director of the Retired Public 

22           Employees Association.  We represent the 

23           interests of retired state and local 

24           government former employees.  And there's 


                                                                   170

 1           nearly 500,000 of us in the state retirement 

 2           system.  So we're in your district, you know 

 3           who we are.

 4                  I thank you for the support you've 

 5           shown in the prior years.  I want to talk 

 6           about two issues today.  And you're not going 

 7           to hear this from anyone else, so it's very 

 8           important.  One has to do with the COLA, the 

 9           cost-of-living adjustment the retirees 

10           receive.  When the COLA was enacted 23 years 

11           ago -- you may or may not know this, but it's 

12           not a real COLA.  It's half a COLA.  And it 

13           can never be less than 1 percent or higher 

14           than 3 percent.

15                  Over time, the value of the pension 

16           benefit that people receive has gone down 

17           dramatically.  And you're probably not aware, 

18           but 24 percent of the retirees in the State 

19           and Local Retirement System have a pension 

20           under $10,000.  And nearly half of them have 

21           a pension less than 20,000.

22                  So there have been bills in the past 

23           to say, well, let's raise the point at which 

24           the COLA applies, which is 18,000.  Let's 


                                                                   171

 1           raise that to 21.  But for these folks who 

 2           are getting a $10,000 pension, raising the 

 3           amount at which the COLA's applied is not 

 4           going to help them.  And these folks need 

 5           help.

 6                  And what we've proposed, come up with, 

 7           is a way to -- what we call a catch-up 

 8           provision, that if you went back to when the 

 9           COLA was enacted 23 years ago and said, well, 

10           what if you got the real COLA, but it could 

11           never be higher than 3 percent -- we're not 

12           going to bust the bank, but if it were to be 

13           4 percent, you know, you would get the max of 

14           3.  But for the most part the COLA has run 

15           about 1.3, 1.4 percent.

16                  And if your pension is under $10,000, 

17           getting a 1 percent increase is not going to 

18           help you much.  

19                  These folks need help.  And there's -- 

20           there's a lot of them.  And we've come up 

21           with this catch-up provision to help them.

22                  So, you know, we also propose raising 

23           the cap from 18 to 21.  The catch-up 

24           provision applies only to current retirees.  


                                                                   172

 1           It would be a one-time calculation.  If you 

 2           raise the threshold from 18 to 21, that 

 3           applies to everyone going forward.

 4                  The other issue I want to raise has to 

 5           do with access to skilled nursing facilities 

 6           for retirees in the Empire Plan.  You're 

 7           probably aware of this, but -- because there 

 8           was a bill that was enacted last year.  All 

 9           of you voted for it.  It passed unanimously 

10           in each house.

11                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  (Inaudible.)

12                  MR. FARRELL:  I know.

13                  I call this to your attention, it's 

14           really important.  The bill's been 

15           reintroduced.  It's Senator Breslin, 

16           John McDonald.  We hope that you include 

17           funding for this in your one-house budget 

18           resolutions.

19                  And finally, we support the proposal 

20           that Barbara has regarding the MC, the 

21           retirees.  Thank you.

22                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  (Mic off; 

23           inaudible.)

24                  Why don't we take Barbara Zaron next.  


                                                                   173

 1           You might want to (inaudible) --

 2                  MS. ZARON:  Okay, thank you.  Thank 

 3           you.  Can you hear me?  Is this working?

 4                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  A little closer.

 5                  MS. ZARON:  Is that better?  Ooh, yes.

 6                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Better.

 7                  MS. ZARON:  Well, thank you very much 

 8           for the opportunity to talk to you from our 

 9           perspective.

10                  So I know there are some people who I 

11           have not seen here before, so I'll just 

12           quickly -- MC employees are unable to join a 

13           union or engage in collective bargaining.  So 

14           they're kind of left out in the ether.  And 

15           we're the folks that represent them.  Most of 

16           them are civil servants who obtained their 

17           positions through competitive examinations.  

18           They're not high-level appointees that most 

19           people think of when they think about civil 

20           servants.

21                  So our MCs, many of them feel 

22           undervalued because frequently their 

23           compensation is not comparable to the 

24           compensation of those people who do belong to 


                                                                   174

 1           a union and who negotiate their contracts.  

 2           So we try always to make sure that MCs are 

 3           treated in a way that's comparable to the 

 4           non-MCs.  

 5                  And so during budget development 

 6           season this year, we wrote to the Governor, 

 7           we wrote to OER and talked to OER outlining 

 8           our salary and benefit recommendations for 

 9           MCs to be included in the budget.  They were 

10           not included in the budget.  And so I'm going 

11           to let you know now what it is that we are 

12           looking for.  And we used the CSEA contract 

13           as our guide and our comparison.  

14                  So what we were hoping for is a 

15           3 percent salary increase this April, a 

16           $3,000 retention bonus as of April, increased 

17           location pay, expansion of longevity pay to 

18           all MCs in graded positions -- not just for 

19           those in Grade 17 and below -- and an 

20           increased cap for sick leave.

21                  So there is a bill, Senate 2395/ 

22           Assembly 3766, which specifically provides 

23           that the state would pay comparable pay and 

24           benefits for MCs.  That would include salary 


                                                                   175

 1           increases, longevity pay, performance 

 2           advances.  So we certainly would like your 

 3           action to pass that.

 4                  The second issue that's of major 

 5           concern to us, and hopefully we can resolve 

 6           this this year, those folks who retired 

 7           between 2009 and 2015 were on the payroll 

 8           when the 2009 and 2010 salary increases were 

 9           withheld for MC employees and for no other 

10           workforce folks.  And what we have proposed, 

11           a $70 per month rebate for every month of 

12           withholding between 2009 and '15, not to 

13           exceed $5,000.  Oh, my goodness.

14                  So we've tried to fix this for 

15           10 years.  We hope this is the year that we 

16           actually can accomplish that.

17                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

18                  MS. ZARON:  Thank you.  No, there are 

19           other things but they've been talked about in 

20           the previous panel.  I just wanted you to 

21           know that we support a lot of the things that 

22           were discussed by the previous panel.

23                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

24                  MS. ZARON:  Thank you.


                                                                   176

 1                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

 2                  Next we're going to go to Joshua 

 3           Terry, legislative director, CSEA Local 1,000 

 4           AFSCME.

 5                  MR. TERRY:  Great.  Thank you, 

 6           Senator.  Thanks, everybody, for being here.

 7                  For a decade we had -- the state 

 8           workforce was strangled.  We couldn't hire 

 9           anybody, nobody was being admitted.  Local 

10           governments are also facing a lot of 

11           difficulty in hiring employees.  And we see 

12           that in our numbers.  We have fewer CPS 

13           caseworkers.  We have fewer emergency 

14           dispatchers, people maintaining our local 

15           infrastructure.  New York State has lost, in 

16           about a decade, 13,000 employees, net.  Our 

17           local governments, about 7 percent of the 

18           workforce has been -- we have a net loss of 

19           7 percent in that same time.

20                  So this is the time that we need to 

21           start making investments.  And we are really  

22           happy to see the Governor has finally 

23           embraced investments in the public workforce, 

24           and we're very supportive of a lot of these 


                                                                   177

 1           proposals.  We will give credit where credit 

 2           is due.  Because I think I've said here in 

 3           years past -- I have blamed agencies on not 

 4           hiring.  Agencies are trying to hire.  OPW 

 5           and OMH especially are doing their best.  But 

 6           there are a lot of headwinds out there for 

 7           hiring.  

 8                  Specifically in this budget we are 

 9           very supportive of the continuous recruitment 

10           proposal from the Governor.  We need to offer 

11           tests routinely.  We cannot do it every 

12           couple of years.  We need to get fresh lists.  

13           We need people to get offered jobs to come 

14           into the workforce.

15                  We're supportive of a proposal to 

16           waive civil service exam fees for a number of 

17           years.  If $40 is a barrier of entry to the 

18           public workforce, it needs to be done away 

19           with.  You do not have to pay Target or 

20           Amazon to apply for a job.  There's no reason 

21           you should have to apply for -- pay money to 

22           not even apply for a job, to take a test to 

23           possibly get a job with the state.

24                  We also -- you know, there's been a 


                                                                   178

 1           lot of talk of how do we connect these jobs 

 2           to underrepresented communities in the 

 3           workforce.  We need to enter the community 

 4           with these job opportunities.  Websites are 

 5           great, it's really good that they get posted 

 6           there.  But unless we get into communities 

 7           with these job positions and talk to people 

 8           about how to apply for the civil service, 

 9           we're not going to connect these jobs with 

10           those individuals.

11                  And lastly, I will channel my Senator 

12           Robert Jackson and talk about how much we 

13           don't like Tier 6.  I won't use his phrase, 

14           because he'll use it later.

15                  (Laughter.)

16                  MR. TERRY:  We need to look at Tier 6 

17           reform.  We are incredibly thankful for what 

18           was done last year, but that just scratched 

19           the surface.  We have a lot of work to do to 

20           make Tier 6 an attractive pension benefit for 

21           people that want to -- that are looking for 

22           work and looking for not just a job, but for 

23           a career.

24                  So we need to look at the 


                                                                   179

 1           contributions, we need to look at the final 

 2           average salary, we need to look at the value 

 3           of the pension.

 4                  So we really look forward to working 

 5           with you in -- over the coming month.  We're 

 6           down to one month now.

 7                  And in my last five seconds I'll say 

 8           hi to my two kids, who are eating tacos, 

 9           watching me on TV at home.

10                  (Laughter.)

11                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

12                  And Randi DiAntonio from PEF.

13                  MS. DiANTONIO:  Good afternoon, 

14           Chairpersons Kruger, Weinstein, Pheffer Amato 

15           and Jackson, and to all other distinguished 

16           members.  My name is Randi DiAntonio.  I'm 

17           the vice president of the New York State 

18           Public Employees Federation.  We represent 

19           about 50,000 professional, scientific and 

20           technical employees employed by the State of 

21           New York.  

22                  I'm very thankful for the opportunity 

23           to appear here today and talk about the 

24           Executive Budget.


                                                                   180

 1                  Ditto to everything my brother at CSEA 

 2           just said as far as we are heartened by the 

 3           fact that we're sitting here having a 

 4           dialogue, a real dialogue, about improving 

 5           the staffing at state agencies, improving how 

 6           government operates.  We are the frontline 

 7           workers.  Whether we do it in our facilities 

 8           or we do it behind a desk, we take care of 

 9           New Yorkers.  And the last decade has made it 

10           almost impossible to do the work that we love 

11           to do.

12                  So we're hopeful that a new day is 

13           dawning.  And we thank the Governor for 

14           lifting the hiring freeze last year.  We're 

15           committed to rebuilding this workforce.  But 

16           frankly, there's a number of things that we 

17           heard about today that we need to fast-track.  

18                  You know, there are things that we've 

19           heard today about modernizing the civil 

20           service system and doing studies, and they 

21           are great ideas.  We support all of them.  

22           But what we're hearing from the folks in the 

23           field are that these things aren't happening 

24           fast enough.  We hear from folks in the field 


                                                                   181

 1           that New York State isn't attractive as an 

 2           employer anymore because of Tier 6, because 

 3           they don't have the same level of pension 

 4           benefits, because the pay isn't equal, you 

 5           know, to what they could get in the private 

 6           sector.

 7                  And frankly, although civil service is 

 8           a great equalizer and it brings people 

 9           on-board from all different places, once they 

10           get there, they don't always feel supported.  

11           We've seen the last years of an increased 

12           reliance on overtime.  Our workforce is 

13           stressed out, they're exhausted, and they 

14           work in somewhat toxic and unsafe working 

15           conditions.

16                  So not only do we have a problem on 

17           the front end with recruitment, we have a 

18           problem on the back end with retention.  We 

19           have seen -- and in the Governor's budget she 

20           talks about we're down 12,500 workers, with 

21           26 percent more ready to retire.  Those folks 

22           ready to retire are going to go.  And we 

23           don't have people coming on board fast enough 

24           to replace them.


                                                                   182

 1                  We know that our services are critical 

 2           to New Yorkers, from OPWDD -- which is 

 3           significantly short-staffed, although we're 

 4           trying to bring people on -- to OMH.  We've 

 5           asked for monies in the budget to support 

 6           reopening some of the homes.  But we need an 

 7           emergency staffing plan.  You know, the 

 8           reality is a lot of these things are great 

 9           ideas and we're appreciative that there's 

10           going to be conversation.  We're happy that 

11           there's no closures to fight off.  

12                  But the reality is, you know, studies 

13           are great, but we know pay equity is a huge 

14           problem.  We know many of our titles can go 

15           to the private sector and make more money.  

16           And because we have about 50/50 frontline 

17           versus administrative support titles, many 

18           can do different types of jobs remotely and 

19           go to other places to work.  But we need them 

20           in government because they take care of our 

21           people.

22                  So thank you so much for the 

23           opportunity today.

24                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.


                                                                   183

 1                  Okay, all four have testified; I'm 

 2           going to now take questions.  I know that 

 3           Senator Ramos would like to start us off with 

 4           questioning.

 5                  SENATOR RAMOS:  I would.  Thank you, 

 6           Senator Krueger.

 7                  Randi, can you talk a little bit more 

 8           about the situation with how tight the labor 

 9           market is right now?  You know, the state 

10           workforce has clocked in 20 million hours in 

11           overtime.  That's a lot.  And now the 

12           Governor's indicating that New York is 

13           currently in need of 12,500 workers.  Can you 

14           talk a little bit more about how we got there 

15           and how we can fix it?

16                  MS. DiANTONIO:  Well, I think we got 

17           there over the last 10 or 11 years of 

18           austerity budgets, demonizing, frankly, 

19           government workers, making people feel 

20           devalued so they didn't want to stay in this 

21           workforce.

22                  So I think that the culture of the 

23           workforce changed.  I mean, I've been with 

24           the state 26 years, and it wasn't like that, 


                                                                   184

 1           you know, the first 15 years I was there.  So 

 2           I think there's a lot of cultural issues that 

 3           affect the workforce.

 4                  Also, you know, with COVID came many 

 5           different extreme working conditions.  And 

 6           with our healthcare professionals -- although 

 7           many other titles -- they were able to go 

 8           elsewhere and to work as travelers, to do 

 9           agency nursing, to go into the private 

10           sector, to do remote health.  I mean, we 

11           represent social workers who now can do 

12           telehealth.  We represent nurses who can go 

13           be travelers.

14                  So I think we didn't get here 

15           overnight, and we know we're not going to fix 

16           it overnight.  But we do have to acknowledge 

17           that the folks that are on the frontlines, 

18           the folks that do this work, have to be 

19           incentivized, they have to be rewarded.  I 

20           think there's a lot of things we can do to, 

21           you know, make public service an option for 

22           people.  We don't talk about it anymore.  We 

23           used to.

24                  SENATOR RAMOS:  That's true.  That's 


                                                                   185

 1           true.

 2                  MS. DiANTONIO:  And we don't bring it 

 3           back to our communities to say, this is a 

 4           career choice that will bring you a lot of 

 5           benefits and a lot of reward.

 6                  SENATOR RAMOS:  Thank you, Randi.

 7                  I have one more question for Josh.

 8                  Josh, how can we ensure that 

 9           continuous recruitment is used to expand the 

10           state workforce to include more people of 

11           color?

12                  MR. TERRY:  Yeah, I mean I think it 

13           gets to what I talked about towards the end 

14           of my testimony, which is we need to promote 

15           these exams.  Civil service is -- it came up 

16           a little bit earlier; I think Assemblyman 

17           Jones brought this up.  It's a tough system.  

18           It's complex.  Not everybody understands it.  

19                  I mean, unless you're in that world -- 

20           I always say like if you look at a civil 

21           service exam notice, it looks like -- it 

22           could look like a lead abatement form.  You 

23           don't know what you're actually reading.  

24                  (Laughter.)


                                                                   186

 1                  SENATOR RAMOS:  It does not look 

 2           attractive at all.

 3                  MR. TERRY:  So let's get into the 

 4           community, let's go to -- let's work with 

 5           organizations, community-based organizations 

 6           to push these job opportunities out.  It 

 7           doesn't have to be the state is the only one 

 8           that's promoting these.  I mean, NAACP came 

 9           up earlier --

10                  SENATOR RAMOS:  Does the union do it?  

11           Does the union go into CBOs to talk to them?

12                  MR. TERRY:  We are 100 percent 

13           committed to working with the state and the 

14           Department of Civil Service to enter the 

15           community and start promoting these jobs and 

16           using, quite frankly, our membership to 

17           promote these jobs.  Because our members are 

18           the best salespeople on the work that they 

19           do.

20                  SENATOR RAMOS:  That's right.  

21           Excellent.  Thank you, Josh.

22                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

23                  Assembly.

24                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JOYNER:  Member Pheffer 


                                                                   187

 1           Amato.

 2                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN PHEFFER AMATO:  Thank 

 3           you.  Boy, I don't know where to go now.

 4                  First of all, I want to thank you both 

 5           past and present frontline workers, all of 

 6           your membership, for everything they've done 

 7           for us.  I mean, they did get us through the 

 8           pandemic.  And I'm sure many of our retirees 

 9           were out there calling the active to let them 

10           know what they should be doing correctly.

11                  I'm going to just jump to Josh, if you 

12           can answer a question for me, something 

13           that's been circulating around here.  There's 

14           been a lot of recent discussion surrounding 

15           the CSEA executive branch contract regarding 

16           out-of-network health insurance benefits.  

17           Can you describe what the negotiated -- and 

18           what the impact on public employees in 

19           New York are?

20                  MR. TERRY:  Great.  Assemblywoman, 

21           thank you.  I appreciate that.

22                  There's been a lot of misinformation 

23           on this topic, and we sent a letter this week 

24           that everybody here should have received.  


                                                                   188

 1                  CSEA, when we were in collective 

 2           bargaining negotiations with the state this 

 3           past summer, we negotiated a change in the 

 4           rate that doctors receive if they are 

 5           out-of-network, if they are out of the NYSHIP 

 6           network.  This is the only place it applies 

 7           for.  In addition, it does not apply to any 

 8           other state union or state union's contract 

 9           other than CSEA's.

10                  When we -- when that went into our 

11           agreement, NYSHIP has -- they have legal 

12           authority, and this stems from I think the 

13           1950s or '60s, to extend any rate changes to 

14           participating agencies -- so local government 

15           employers and public authorities.  And they 

16           chose to do so.  That was not part of our 

17           agreement, they did that unilaterally.

18                  In reality, what this change means for 

19           our members is they still have full access to 

20           the whole NYSHIP network, and especially from 

21           Long Island and New York City, I mean, you 

22           can throw a rock and hit a participating 

23           doctor in the NYSHIP system.  But they still 

24           have the full authority to go out of network.  


                                                                   189

 1           And --

 2                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN PHEFFER AMATO:  So --

 3                  MR. TERRY:  Oh, I'm sorry, 

 4           Assemblywoman --

 5                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN PHEFFER AMATO:  You go.  

 6           You go.

 7                  MR. TERRY:  So what change was the 

 8           actual reimbursement rate?  We went from 

 9           about 550 percent of the Medicare rate, 

10           generally, to about 275 percent of the 

11           Medicare rate.  Which is still, for 

12           out-of-network coverage and out-of-network 

13           rates, compared to most other plans, is still 

14           a very generous reimbursement rate.

15                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN PHEFFER AMATO:  So let 

16           me just clarify this.  

17                  So there's no diminished benefit to 

18           the membership, we just took -- it's less 

19           payout to the doctor.

20                  MR. TERRY:  One hundred percent 

21           correct, yes.

22                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN PHEFFER AMATO:  Okay.  

23           So I'm just going to repeat that again.  So 

24           we did not diminish any benefit to the 


                                                                   190

 1           membership.

 2                  MR. TERRY:  One hundred percent 

 3           correct.

 4                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN PHEFFER AMATO:  Okay, I 

 5           just want to make sure we're really clear on 

 6           that and we get that for the sound bite, 

 7           because --

 8                  MR. TERRY:  I appreciate that.

 9                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN PHEFFER AMATO:  -- it's 

10           been circulating and the conversations have 

11           been all over the place.  Thank you for that.

12                  Ed, I want to say to you that any 

13           retiree that's making $10,000, we should be 

14           helping.  So I want to support that just to 

15           say that, you know, what salary they got 

16           years ago and not catching up, it's really -- 

17           we're just promoting the poverty.

18                  MR. FARRELL:  Correct.

19                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN PHEFFER AMATO:  And for 

20           all the service they gave us to be a 

21           retiree -- you know, I want you to just know 

22           that I'm supportive of those initiatives and 

23           just help to bring them forward.

24                  MR. FARRELL:  Thank you.  


                                                                   191

 1           Thirty-some-odd years ago, salaries were much 

 2           lower.  And, you know, your final average 

 3           salary in your pension was $10,000 or less.

 4                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN PHEFFER AMATO:  In 1986 

 5           when I first worked for the Department of 

 6           Sanitation, I made $17,000, so --

 7                  (Laughter.)

 8                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN PHEFFER AMATO:  Thank 

 9           you very much, all of you.

10                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Senator Robert 

11           Jackson.

12                  SENATOR JACKSON:  So good evening.  It 

13           is evening, right?  Yes, it is.

14                  So I have a question to you.  I always 

15           said that Tier 6 sucks.  But, you know, I'm 

16           saying that now because it expresses the 

17           dissatisfaction from the people that I've 

18           talked to.  And so I ask you, as leaders of 

19           the various unions or organizations you 

20           belong to, what are you hearing about Tier 6 

21           and why the people are not in favor or it?

22                  So if you can give me short answers, 

23           because I only have two minutes and a half.

24                  MS. DiANTONIO:  I'll start.  


                                                                   192

 1                  I think it's very disheartening for 

 2           people to stand next to a worker that's 

 3           getting a completely different benefit.  They 

 4           see no end of light at the tunnel, you know?  

 5           There's nothing there to stay committed to 

 6           state work.  I think what we hear from Tier 6 

 7           members is, you know:  This isn't worth me 

 8           staying for, I can go somewhere else.  So it 

 9           really creates a situation where people are 

10           not staying as career employees.  And I think 

11           that's a huge issue.

12                  It's also -- it's a much lower benefit 

13           that they're paying more for.  So -- I mean, 

14           I think, in a nutshell, they pay more to get 

15           less.

16                  SENATOR JACKSON:  Barbara?

17                  MS. ZARON:  I personally have not 

18           heard a lot.  But I think that, in part, that 

19           maybe we tend to have longer-term 

20           employees --

21                  SENATOR JACKSON:  You're the 

22           management/confidential employees, is that 

23           correct?

24                  MS. ZARON:  Most of the folks start 


                                                                   193

 1           either through a CSEA or PEF kind of position 

 2           and work their way up -- not all, but a fair 

 3           proportion of.  

 4                  And it may be that they're more 

 5           consumed with the immediate issues that 

 6           they're trying to deal with than even 

 7           thinking about --

 8                  SENATOR JACKSON:  Okay.  Do you mind 

 9           if I go to Josh, please?

10                  MS. ZARON:  So most of them may not be 

11           Tier 6.  I'm sure there are some, but I think 

12           most of them probably are the earlier tiers 

13           and not quite as intimately involved with the 

14           issue of Tier 6.

15                  SENATOR JACKSON:  Thank you.

16                  Josh, please?

17                  MR. TERRY:  It's three things.  They 

18           pay more for Tier 6, they get less under 

19           Tier 6, and they have to work longer, at the 

20           end of the day.  Those are the three things 

21           that our members talk about.

22                  SENATOR JACKSON:  And Ed, what are you 

23           hearing?  Even though you're dealing with the 

24           Retired Public Employees Association.


                                                                   194

 1                  MR. FARRELL:  Senator, I can tell you 

 2           that retirees have zero conversations about 

 3           this.

 4                  (Laughter.)

 5                  SENATOR JACKSON:  They're gone.

 6                  But also I want to know, in the last 

 7           24 seconds, how bad is contracting out in 

 8           your unions, PEP and CSEA?  And you only have 

 9           18 seconds, and I can follow up with my 

10           staff.

11                  MS. DiANTONIO:  It's a significant 

12           problem in many of our agencies.  We have 

13           nurses or other titles sitting next to a 

14           state employee, making more money, with less 

15           responsibilities.  They have their own 

16           schedule set for what works for them.  It 

17           really is divisive and demeaning to the state 

18           workforce, and it costs way more money.

19                  SENATOR JACKSON:  Josh, we'll 

20           follow up with you on that, okay?  

21                  MR. TERRY:  Absolutely.

22                  SENATOR JACKSON:  And the two of you 

23           also, if you heard anything.

24                  Thank you.


                                                                   195

 1                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

 2                  Assembly.

 3                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JOYNER:  Member Lucas?

 4                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LUCAS:  Thank you, 

 5           Madam Chair.

 6                  Okay, this is for the Retired Public 

 7           Employees Association.  In your testimony, 

 8           the pension cost of living speaks to catching 

 9           up to the annual cap of 3 percent for the 

10           current eligible retirees.

11                  MR. FARRELL:  Correct.

12                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LUCAS:  What is the 

13           impact to the State of New York fiscally to 

14           fill this potential budget ask for the 

15           retirees?

16                  Additionally, will our current 

17           inflation rate have a subsequent impact on 

18           the cost-of-living increase for the retirees?

19                  MR. FARRELL:  This proposal that I 

20           talked about was actually in print at the end 

21           of last session, and it had a fiscal note.  

22           So the fiscal note from the retirement system 

23           put the catch-up provision at $107 million.  

24           Which is peanuts when you consider the 


                                                                   196

 1           pension fund is 242 billion.

 2                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LUCAS:  Okay.  And the 

 3           second part of the question?

 4                  MR. FARRELL:  Which was --

 5                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LUCAS:  The inflation 

 6           rate --

 7                  MR. FARRELL:  Our proposal still has 

 8           the 3 percent cap.  Only one time in the 

 9           history of the COLA did it ever reach 

10           3 percent, and that was this year.  That's 

11           because inflation was 9 percent.  So we got 

12           3.  

13                  That's the only time in the history of 

14           the COLA that we've gotten 3 percent.  For 

15           the most part we've gotten, on average, 1.5.

16                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LUCAS:  So will it have 

17           an impact on -- the inflation rate, will it 

18           have a subsequent impact on the 

19           cost-of-living increase for retirees?

20                  MR. FARRELL:  The 3 percent cap 

21           remains in place.  So if inflation drops down 

22           to 8 percent instead of 9, we would still 

23           only get 3.  

24                  So there have been two times in the 


                                                                   197

 1           history where actually the rate of inflation 

 2           was less than 1 percent, and the retirees got 

 3           a bit of a boost because we got the 1 

 4           percent, as opposed to a half of 1 percent.  

 5           So --

 6                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LUCAS:  Got it.

 7                  MR. FARRELL:  It's in there, but if 

 8           you leave the guardrails in there with the 1 

 9           percent floor and the 3 percent ceiling, none 

10           of that changes.

11                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LUCAS:  Thank you.

12                  MR. FARRELL:  You're welcome.

13                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

14                  Assembly.

15                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JOYNER:  Member Jones.

16                  ASSEMBLYMAN JONES:  Hello, everyone.  

17           And thank you for your testimony.

18                  First of all, I just want to state I'm 

19           with you on Tier 6.  We need to reform it.  

20           What better way of a recruitment tool would 

21           we have than to improve Tier 6, when we're 

22           sitting here talking about we don't have 

23           enough workforce in many of our agencies.  

24                  On that, I do want to touch on 


                                                                   198

 1           something else, and I do have some questions 

 2           here.  I've been hearing a lot from your 

 3           members about safety issues in a lot of the 

 4           facilities that you work in.  I actually -- a 

 5           colleague from CSEA of Josh's the other 

 6           evening, when I was at the reception, pulled 

 7           me aside and showed me some very disturbing 

 8           pictures of one of your employees.

 9                  What can we do to improve that 

10           situation in those facilities?  That's my 

11           first question.

12                  My second question, because I'm going 

13           to get it all out, we have this cap with 

14           retirees.  We raised it from 30,000 to 

15           35,000.  And I ask this because we need to 

16           continue to recruit people.  What's your 

17           opinion on the cap, and should we still have 

18           it in place?  I know I'm putting you on the 

19           spot a little there.

20                  But we need to recruit workers and we 

21           need to get people in these agencies.  This 

22           is detrimental.  It has to do with safety in 

23           our facilities.  It has to do with other 

24           things going.


                                                                   199

 1                  Also on the COLA, I missed part of 

 2           your testimony, I apologize.  What is the 

 3           recommended -- what do we want to see that 

 4           percentage of COLA going up to?

 5                  So I'll leave those questions to you 

 6           to answer.

 7                  MR. TERRY:  Assemblyman, on the first 

 8           part of your question on safety in our 

 9           worksites, it is a real problem.  But I think 

10           you -- you know, you also alluded to the 

11           answer.  A lot of the issues that we have 

12           regarding safety -- and it really revolves 

13           around violence -- it's about staffing.  And 

14           you are safer when you're in pairs or, you 

15           know, with multiple people.

16                  And unfortunately, over the course of 

17           the last decade, that's gone by the wayside, 

18           but the job still has to get done.  So our 

19           members still go into a situation that may be 

20           unsafe, and it's not by the book, but they 

21           have to go treat a patient, right?  I mean, 

22           you have to provide the service.  And our 

23           members will always do that, regardless of 

24           the situation.


                                                                   200

 1                  And so we need to -- it's staffing.  

 2           It comes down to staffing, at the end of the 

 3           day.

 4                  MS. DiANTONIO:  And the only thing I'd 

 5           like to add to that, I agree a hundred 

 6           percent, staffing has a lot to do with it.  

 7           But over the course of 10 years we also 

 8           closed a lot of our intensive treatment 

 9           facilities that were geared towards the most 

10           complex-need individuals.  And when that 

11           happens, they end up in settings that might 

12           be less secure, less structured, less 

13           environmentally controlled.  And that also 

14           influences how they're taken care of and how 

15           safe they are, and the people who take care 

16           of them are.

17                  ASSEMBLYMAN JONES:  Thank you.  I'll 

18           get the other question offline.

19                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

20                  Senator Jack Martins.

21                  SENATOR MARTINS:  Thank you.  Thank 

22           you all for still being with us a couple of 

23           minutes before 7 o'clock.  

24                  Josh, to your point, I mean, is there 


                                                                   201

 1           a recommendation on how we streamline this?  

 2           I'm hearing from a bunch of different sources 

 3           that we have jobs, we have people who may 

 4           want to work -- and we'll deal with Tier 6 in 

 5           a second.  But, you know, we can't get a 

 6           list, we can't get an exam, there seems to be 

 7           a bottleneck here.  And do you have any 

 8           suggestions on how we should deal with that 

 9           from our end?

10                  MR. TERRY:  I mean, I think part of it 

11           is staffing within the Department of 

12           Civil Service.  I mean, they have been 

13           decimated.  And I know -- I read PEF's 

14           testimony earlier, and they allude to this in 

15           that testimony, that the department doesn't 

16           have enough staff to run the operations.

17                  So the commissioner referred to this:  

18           They have to prioritize, and they're only 

19           looking at tests that are the most critical.  

20           Which is causing problems across the board.  

21           Because by the time we catch up to the ones 

22           that are -- the jobs that are less critical, 

23           the ones that are not urgent, we've already 

24           lost them.  Right?  I mean, we're already way 


                                                                   202

 1           understaffed.

 2                  So I think we need to make the 

 3           investments inside the department, which 

 4           we're happy the Governor has started doing 

 5           that last year into this year.

 6                  SENATOR MARTINS:  And when we talk 

 7           about retirees, $10,000, are we talking about 

 8           people who have put in their 20 or 30 years 

 9           in state service, full-time employees, at the 

10           end of their retirement, and then only 

11           qualifying for $10,000 in pension?  Are we at 

12           that point?  Or are we dealing with the 

13           majority of those people in your example 

14           being part-timers who put in their 10 years 

15           and then moved on to the private sector?  

16           Where is that range?

17                  MR. FARRELL:  No --

18                  SENATOR MARTINS:  Because they would 

19           still qualify for a pension.

20                  MR. FARRELL:  You have to be able to 

21           qualify for the pension.  So if you're 

22           part-time, you can't put in 10 years, you'd 

23           have to put in 20 years, you know, to have 

24           your 10-year --


                                                                   203

 1                  SENATOR MARTINS:  Well, then let's say 

 2           it's 20 years as a part-timer.  I'm just 

 3           trying to contextualize --

 4                  MR. FARRELL:  These are folks -- these 

 5           are real people who, because their job -- 

 6           their salary was so low when they were 

 7           working 30 years ago, that when their pension 

 8           was calculated that those -- this is a 

 9           quarter of the people in the retirement 

10           system.

11                  SENATOR MARTINS:  Don't get me wrong, 

12           I'm not questioning that.  I'm trying to 

13           contextualize the nature of those -- whether 

14           this was their full-time job or these are 

15           people who had a full-time job outside, 

16           because we have many people who work 

17           part-time in the public sector.  That's all.  

18           I wanted to clarify that.

19                  And as far as Tier 6, you know, 

20           it's -- I hear it, I know you hear it every 

21           day, people who are working side by side with 

22           others who are in different tiers who are 

23           asked to do the same work, receiving less and 

24           fewer benefits.  And I do think it's 


                                                                   204

 1           something that we should address.  

 2                  And I was hoping, in the last 

 3           20 seconds or so -- give me your thoughts.

 4                  MS. DiANTONIO:  We would support that 

 5           all the way.  Thank you.

 6                  SENATOR MARTINS:  And Josh, with about 

 7           10 seconds, you want to say hello to your 

 8           kids again?

 9                  (Laughter.)

10                  MR. TERRY:  They're probably on their 

11           fifth taco at this point, but --

12                  (Laughter.)

13                  MR. TERRY:  We need to lower 

14           contributions for Tier 6.  We need to bring 

15           it down to 3 percent, Senator.

16                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

17                  Assembly.

18                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JOYNER:  We wish we were 

19           having tacos too.

20                  (Laughter.)

21                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JOYNER:  But Member 

22           Bronson.

23                  ASSEMBLYMAN BRONSON:  Thank you, 

24           Madam Chair.


                                                                   205

 1                  And thank you all for your testimony.

 2                  My first question is for 

 3           Ms. DiAntonio.  And we usually talk about the 

 4           Rochester Psych Center, but we're not going 

 5           to talk about that tonight.   You used the 

 6           phrase -- you said "What we need now is an 

 7           emergency staffing plan."  What would that 

 8           look like?

 9                  MS. DiANTONIO:  Well, I think there's 

10           a lot of obstacles that get in the way of 

11           bringing staff on board fast.  Some of them 

12           relate to what was alluded to around staffing 

13           and Civil Service -- not having enough tests, 

14           not having enough testing sites, not being 

15           accessible.  

16                  But it's also the time frame between 

17           someone taking a test and getting hired.  We 

18           have great candidates who are interested in 

19           working for the government, and it takes six 

20           months to bring them on board after they 

21           offer them an exam -- offer them the job.  So 

22           we lose them in that time between.

23                  What I can tell you from just looking 

24           at this, years ago human resources used to 


                                                                   206

 1           have control at the agency levels, at the 

 2           local level, on their on-boarding -- when 

 3           they posted positions, how they brought 

 4           people on.  That function has mostly been 

 5           centralized into our Albany central offices.  

 6           It takes a lot longer.  The more layers you 

 7           put on it, the longer it takes.

 8                  We're losing good people.  So I think 

 9           if there are ways to bring down those 

10           obstacles so that it takes less time.  I 

11           think also the way we bring people in from 

12           like student internships, mentorships.  We've 

13           gotten away from that.  We used to have 

14           relationships with a lot of colleges that 

15           they would provide interns.  Those interns 

16           would then become long-term employees.  And 

17           we worked with them so they knew the job.

18                  What's happening now is people that 

19           get hired get thrown into the fire and 

20           they're like, Holy cow, I'm working 30 hours 

21           of overtime my second week here, I don't know 

22           what I'm doing.  And then they may leave.

23                  So we put all this investment -- even 

24           if we can get them in the door, it's hard to 


                                                                   207

 1           keep them if we don't wraparound the supports 

 2           they need.  So I think there's a lot of 

 3           conversation we can have about how to better 

 4           that.  You know, all of this really boils 

 5           down to talking about these issues and coming 

 6           up with creative solutions.  I'm heartened 

 7           that we're talking about them, because I 

 8           don't think -- even though we've been ringing 

 9           this bell for a long time, we haven't had 

10           these in-depth conversations.

11                  ASSEMBLYMAN BRONSON:  So I've been 

12           doing this for a long time.  This is the 

13           first year we're talking about how do we 

14           recruit state workers.  It used to be cut, 

15           cut, cut.  And now we're paying the piper.  I 

16           mean, now we're facing -- I mean, there's 

17           lots of other reasons why we're 

18           short-staffed, because short-staffing is 

19           everywhere.  But for state workers it's 

20           because we went through a decade of balancing 

21           budgets by cutting workers.  

22                  And so I'm glad we're having this 

23           conversation.  I look forward to working with 

24           all of you and trying to turn this around.


                                                                   208

 1                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

 2                  I don't believe -- no, we don't have 

 3           any other Senators, so Assembly, keep 

 4           rolling.

 5                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JOYNER:  Member Simon.

 6                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN SIMON:  You need some 

 7           work, some training.

 8                  (Laughter.)

 9                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN SIMON:  So thank you all 

10           for your testimony.  

11                  So I wanted to ask a similar question, 

12           and that is when it comes to recruitment and 

13           training and the accessibility -- 

14           accessibility can be many things.  How are 

15           PEF and CSEA reaching out to people with 

16           disabilities in the workforce who need these 

17           jobs?  We want people paying taxes.

18                  You know, what are we doing to bring 

19           people into the workforce who have 

20           disabilities?  Which could be a whole, as you 

21           know, huge continuum of people who might 

22           need, you know, minor accommodations on the 

23           worksite.

24                  MR. TERRY:  Yeah, Assemblywoman, thank 


                                                                   209

 1           you for that question.  

 2                  You know, we're really supportive of 

 3           the Governor's proposal to increase the 55B 

 4           program from 1200 to 1700.  The report that 

 5           came out at the end of 2022 from the 

 6           Rockefeller Institute, which was requested, 

 7           mandated by the Legislature, showed that 

 8           we're nearing that level, we're nearing the 

 9           capacity in that program.  And so this is 

10           probably the time for us to expand it.

11                  When people take those jobs, they are 

12           in our bargaining units, and they are 

13           entitled to all of our contract, we represent 

14           them.  And we really serve a valuable role 

15           within not just the state government but 

16           local governments as well.  And so we really 

17           want to encourage, you know, more people to 

18           enter that program because they are more 

19           heavily unemployed statewide -- nationwide.  

20           And we need to do more to encourage them to 

21           come into this workforce.

22                  MS. DiANTONIO:  And we agree.  We 

23           support the 55B expansion.  But I think also 

24           not only bringing people in but keeping them, 


                                                                   210

 1           we really need to look at the reasonable 

 2           accommodation process, making sure people are 

 3           given the tools that they need to stay in the 

 4           workforce once they're there.  Because a lot 

 5           of times people may become disabled while 

 6           they're a state employee, and it's very 

 7           difficult to bring them back or keep them on 

 8           the job. 

 9                  And there should be a more robust, 

10           more timely process to do that.  We find a 

11           lot of people end up, you know, retiring or 

12           leaving early because the agencies either 

13           cannot or will not accommodate.  So there's 

14           more to do in that area, absolutely.

15                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN SIMON:  And so I'd like 

16           to talk to you about that, because that is an 

17           ongoing obligation of an employer, whatever 

18           that agency is.  

19                  And of course it's also about 

20           promotions, right?  There are plenty of 

21           people -- you know, 55B isn't the only way 

22           that you can bring people with disabilities 

23           into the workforce.  You have people who are 

24           highly educated that need certain -- you 


                                                                   211

 1           know, screen reader -- you know, right, and 

 2           can do whatever job you have, but they're not 

 3           necessarily the 55B workforce.

 4                  So I want to make sure we expand our 

 5           mentality about that as well, and an ongoing 

 6           issue with regard to accommodations.  So 

 7           thank you.

 8                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JOYNER:  Member 

 9           Zinerman.

10                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN ZINERMAN:  Good evening.  

11                  This question is for Ms. Zaron.  In 

12           your testimony you have an entire section on 

13           diversity in hiring and employment.  And I 

14           just want to refer first to the first bullet 

15           allowing for expanded remote working 

16           arrangements where possible.

17                  How many jobs have been reevaluated to 

18           include that as an option?  Especially when 

19           we think about the cost of childcare and how 

20           many women have left the workplace -- happy 

21           Women's History Month.

22                  And I also -- so that's just my 

23           question.  Other things, I just want to say I 

24           think that we can do -- and I know we've had 


                                                                   212

 1           to do that as well with regard to recruiting 

 2           people to come and work for the Assembly -- 

 3           really talking to people about not only the 

 4           tasks related to the job, but the environment 

 5           that people are going to work in.  

 6                  Recruitment has been a reoccurring 

 7           theme throughout this entire hearing today.  

 8           everybody has touched on it.  And I really 

 9           think that we have to expand what -- have a 

10           profile of who we're trying to recruit, 

11           having a real idea of what people are looking 

12           for in work.  People want to be valued, they 

13           want to understand the mission of the 

14           organization, they want to connect their work 

15           to the mission of the organization.

16                  So how much of that is actually being 

17           done in your recruitment?  And specifically 

18           if you can just kind of answer the question 

19           about remote access and how many people -- 

20           how many job titles have actually been 

21           reevaluated to include remote access, working 

22           remotely.

23                  MS. ZARON:  Well, I personally have no 

24           idea how many jobs have been evaluated --


                                                                   213

 1                  UNIDENTIFIED LEGISLATOR:  I'm sorry, I 

 2           can't hear you.

 3                  MS. ZARON:  I personally -- she was 

 4           asking me how many jobs have been evaluated 

 5           or reevaluated for remote access.  I don't 

 6           know the answer to that.

 7                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN ZINERMAN:  Okay.  Well, 

 8           it's one of your -- that's why I asked.  Does 

 9           anybody else want to jump in?  All right, if 

10           you don't know, is it something that you're 

11           in support of, you want to see happen?  

12           Because I know a lot of workers, this is a 

13           big question for them.

14                  MS. DiANTONIO:  Yeah.  So with PEF 

15           titles, we have 3,000 titles, and many of 

16           them have been able to show that they can be 

17           productive working remotely.  We also know 

18           that many of those professions in the private 

19           sector are offering remote work.  So it not 

20           only becomes something that people want to do 

21           for work/life balance reasons, but it also 

22           becomes a tool to keep people in their jobs 

23           and to bring people into the workforce.

24                  You know, our position is that we want 


                                                                   214

 1           to maximize hybrid work, remote work, where 

 2           it's feasible to do so, because we believe 

 3           that people that have work/life balance, you 

 4           know, are happier.  But at the same time we 

 5           also know 50 percent of our workforce are 

 6           not -- they're in jobs that are public 

 7           facing, front facing.  Those are not going to 

 8           be options.

 9                  So I don't know off the top of my head 

10           like how many have been evaluated.  I know 

11           that, you know, PEF has entered into 

12           agreements and discussions with state 

13           agencies; where we can do it, we are 

14           encouraging agencies to look at this and 

15           really support it.

16                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

17                  Assembly again.

18                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JOYNER:  To close, 

19           Member Manktelow.

20                  ASSEMBLYMAN MANKTELOW:  Thank you, 

21           Madam Chair.  

22                  And good evening, everyone.  Good 

23           evening, Randi, how are you?

24                  MS. DiANTONIO:  I'm good, Brian, how 


                                                                   215

 1           are you?

 2                  ASSEMBLYMAN MANKTELOW:  Good.  Good.  

 3           Couple of questions for you, really quick, 

 4           Randi.

 5                  My colleague next to me, Assemblyman 

 6           Jones, touched on workplace safety.  And I've 

 7           met with many of the workers -- some of those 

 8           workers, Randi, working doubles and triples, 

 9           some of them having families.  One of the 

10           women I talked to had twins at home.

11                  I've got concerns as well about the 

12           safety not only in the workplace, but when 

13           they leave the workplace.  What can we do to 

14           emphasize that, what can we do to make that a 

15           top priority not only in the budget process, 

16           but outside of the budget process?  Because 

17           this isn't going to fix everything in a 

18           month.

19                  So I was just wondering what your 

20           thoughts were, Randi, on that.  Or anyone.

21                  MS. DiANTONIO:  So we've also heard 

22           from many of those workers, a lot of them are 

23           probably members of CSEA, at least I think 

24           you're talking about at OPWDD, primarily, in 


                                                                   216

 1           our area?

 2                  ASSEMBLYMAN MANKTELOW:  Yup.

 3                  MS. DiANTONIO:  You know, for -- the 

 4           state was in a critical situation and they 

 5           offered 2.5 times overtime to many of our 

 6           employees to sort of support CSEA's work in 

 7           direct care so that people weren't working 

 8           doubles, triples.  Unfortunately, that's very 

 9           expensive in this system, and wasn't going to 

10           be the forever solution.

11                  I do think that we need to do more 

12           with flexible scheduling, alternative work 

13           schedules, compressed work weeks, and be 

14           really creative, because people are being 

15           expected to work doubles and triples.  They 

16           can't do it.  You can't work for certain 

17           agencies if you have children, if you have a 

18           dog, if you have a life.  And they're not 

19           going to stay if they go to work and they 

20           can't leave.

21                  ASSEMBLYMAN MANKTELOW:  Especially, 

22           like you said earlier, you throw them right 

23           into the fire right off the bat, then they're 

24           not going to stay.


                                                                   217

 1                  MS. DiANTONIO:  I mean, I would think, 

 2           you know, CSEA probably has a little more to 

 3           say about this, because it's mostly their 

 4           members that are in these -- at least with 

 5           OPW, and I know that's who's contacted you.  

 6           They've been on the frontlines of a very 

 7           difficult situation for many, many years.

 8                  MR. TERRY:  Yeah, it's a great point, 

 9           Assemblyman.  And the problem we have is we 

10           have people get hired, especially OPWDD, they 

11           are on the job one week, and they are 

12           mandated overtime.  And it could be mandated 

13           overnight, it could be on a weekend.  They 

14           quit.  Right?  I mean, they do not stay.  

15                  But the ones that do -- I mean, we've 

16           had members that have worked consecutive 

17           hours of 50, 60, 70 hours because they cannot 

18           leave their group home unless they have 

19           relief.  And if that relief calls out sick, 

20           if the person just doesn't show up, they're 

21           staying there.

22                  And our members care.  Our members are 

23           not going to abandon their clients, right?  I 

24           mean, they truly love these people.  I mean, 


                                                                   218

 1           they build these long-lasting relationships 

 2           with --

 3                  ASSEMBLYMAN MANKTELOW:  I see that 

 4           firsthand.

 5                  MR. TERRY:  And so they will work 

 6           those hours.  They will miss the birthdays, 

 7           they will miss picking their kids up from 

 8           daycare and figure out another arrangement.  

 9           It is a real problem to really solidifying 

10           the -- not just the workforce, but the 

11           industry and the care that they're able to 

12           provide.

13                  ASSEMBLYMAN MANKTELOW:  One second 

14           left.  You have my full support in changing 

15           Tier 6.  Thank you.

16                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

17                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JOYNER:  To close, 

18           again, Member Ra.

19                  ASSEMBLYMAN RA:  Thank you all for 

20           your patience today.

21                  I just had a question for PEF.  There 

22           has been some conversation -- I know you have 

23           members that work within some of the prisons 

24           regarding HALT and basically your desire to 


                                                                   219

 1           maybe make some changes to HALT.

 2                  MS. DiANTONIO:  So yes, we do -- we 

 3           represent teachers, counselors, a number of 

 4           different professional titles within our 

 5           correctional settings.  And the HALT bill, 

 6           while very well-intentioned -- and we agree 

 7           with a lot of aspects of it in regards to we 

 8           want people to be treated humanely.  

 9                  Unfortunately, what we're hearing from 

10           our members are some unintended consequences 

11           to it, with an increase of up to 45 percent 

12           of inmate-to-inmate assaults and about 

13           25 percent increase in staff assaults.  A lot 

14           of the circumstances we're hearing about are 

15           people doing bad acts so that they get 

16           removed from the larger population because of 

17           safety reasons.  

18                  So, again, we support, you know, a lot 

19           of the intent of the HALT legislation, but we 

20           think there needs to be some tweaks to make 

21           it safer for people.  We are definitely 

22           hearing from our members that they have 

23           concern not only for safety for themselves 

24           and the people that they serve, but 


                                                                   220

 1           therapeutically.  They just don't have -- 

 2           some of those programs, while from the 

 3           outside looking in may look like they're bad 

 4           programs, there are therapeutic reasons to 

 5           keep people separate from one another, to 

 6           make sure they're in a safe space, to make 

 7           sure that if they're decompensating they get 

 8           treatment in a way that is going to protect 

 9           them and others.

10                  So I think those are conversations we 

11           should have about this with all those 

12           players.  You know, everybody should be at 

13           the table.  Because I don't work in 

14           Corrections, so I can't speak to their 

15           day-to-day business, but we have heard some 

16           really bad stories coming out of there.  And 

17           frankly the majority of people getting hurt 

18           are the people that are incarcerated.

19                  ASSEMBLYMAN RA:  Thank you.

20                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  All right, since 

21           the Senate and the Assembly are closed for 

22           this panel, thank you very much for being 

23           here with us tonight.  We appreciate it.

24                  PANELISTS:  Thank you.  Thank you.


                                                                   221

 1                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you to your 

 2           members.

 3                  Next panel up is going to be the 

 4           Center for New York City Affairs at 

 5           The New School, James Parrot, director of 

 6           many things; the National Employment 

 7           Law Project, Paul Sonn, state policy 

 8           program director; and Hugh Baran from the 

 9           Kakalec/EmPIRE Coalition.

10                  MR. PARROTT:  Good evening.

11                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Good evening.  

12           How are you, James?

13                  MR. PARROTT:  James Parrott is my 

14           name, I'm director of economic and fiscal 

15           policies at the Center for New York City 

16           Affairs.  Thank you for the opportunity to 

17           testify this evening.

18                  I want to come back to the 

19           unemployment insurance issue.  New York 

20           State's unemployment insurance financing is 

21           severely flawed.  It is the reason we're 

22           facing an $8 billion trust fund federal debt  

23           that will take another four to five years to 

24           pay down.  It's the reason our benefit 


                                                                   222

 1           structure is mediocre at best and inferior to 

 2           benefits paid in all of our neighboring 

 3           states.  And it is the reason our employers 

 4           are paying much higher UI taxes than they 

 5           were before the pandemic.

 6                  New York's UI tax structure causes 

 7           small employers with fewer than 100 employees 

 8           to pay effective tax rates, relative to total 

 9           wages, that are three to four times the rates 

10           paid by large companies with 500 or more 

11           employees.  Industries with low-average wages 

12           pay much higher effective UI tax rates than 

13           very high wage industries like finance, 

14           information, media, technology and so on.

15                  The irony here is that the pandemic 

16           hit hardest those industries and employers 

17           who are paying the highest taxes now and, on 

18           the flip side, the industries that prospered 

19           during the pandemic are paying the lowest 

20           unemployment taxes.  My written testimony has 

21           charts with the latest data from the federal 

22           government that illustrate this very 

23           regressive tax structure.

24                  The root of the problem is New York's 


                                                                   223

 1           unusually low taxable wage base of $12,300, 

 2           lower than in 35 of the 50 states despite the 

 3           fact that New York has the highest average 

 4           weekly wage of all 50 states.  Because of 

 5           New York's chronic UI trust fund insolvency, 

 6           the state's maximum weekly benefit has been 

 7           frozen at $504 since 2019.  It would be $200 

 8           more per week if our fund were solvent, and 

 9           nearly twice that if it were 50 percent of 

10           our average weekly wage -- which it was in 

11           2000.  

12                  Some commentators have mistakenly 

13           attributed New York's trust fund debt to 

14           fraud.  This tendency was compounded by an 

15           unfortunate press release accompanying a 

16           State Comptroller audit that exaggerated the 

17           extent of fraud related to the state's UI 

18           trust fund by a factor of 25 -- they made up 

19           a number.

20                  New York's UI trust fund debt burden 

21           can only be addressed by overhauling the 

22           financing system, by following the lead of 

23           other states that assess unemployment taxes 

24           on a higher portion of payroll and also on 


                                                                   224

 1           gig companies.  New York can pay back its 

 2           debt sooner, make sure big corporations pay 

 3           their share, expand the state's inadequate 

 4           benefits, and actually reduce taxes on small 

 5           businesses.  New York has the latitude under 

 6           federal law to lessen the weight of the 

 7           experience rating in setting our tax rates.

 8                  Thank you.

 9                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

10                  Next?  Hi, Paul.

11                  MR. SONN:  Am I on?  Yup.

12                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Yes.

13                  MR. SONN:  Great.

14                  Well, thank you, Chairs Krueger, 

15           Weinstein, Ramos and Joyner, and other 

16           members of the committee.  Thanks for the 

17           opportunity to testify this evening on the 

18           competing proposals to raise New York's 

19           minimum wage.  I'm Paul Sonn, with the 

20           National Employment Law Project.  

21                  I'll briefly summarize some of the key 

22           points that I spell out in more detail in my 

23           written testimony.

24                  First, the highest inflation in 


                                                                   225

 1           40 years is rapidly eroding New York's 

 2           first-in-the-nation $15 minimum wage and 

 3           reducing the historic reductions in poverty 

 4           and earnings inequality statewide that the 

 5           $15 minimum wage achieved.

 6                  The Legislature, we respectfully urge, 

 7           should reverse those gains by first including 

 8           in the one-house budgets the Raise the Wage 

 9           Act that many of you are cosponsors of, and 

10           it's sponsored additionally by Senator Ramos 

11           and Assemblymember Joyner, and then work to 

12           pass it.  It would raise the minimum wage to 

13           $21.25 by 2026 and then automatically adjust 

14           or index it each year after that so that it 

15           keeps up with inflation and worker 

16           productivity going forward.  

17                  The Governor's meager minimum wage 

18           proposal -- which is far less generous than 

19           New York's last minimum wage increase that 

20           the Republican-led Senate negotiated and 

21           passed back in 2016 -- is far too small and 

22           really, with respect, should be a nonstarter.  

23                  While there are many problems with it, 

24           its major failing is that it provides only 


                                                                   226

 1           for tiny adjustments to partially respond to 

 2           future inflation, while ignoring altogether 

 3           the huge past drop in the value of New York's 

 4           minimum wage as a result of inflation since 

 5           2019.  In essence, the Governor proposes to 

 6           close the inflation barn door only long after 

 7           the horse has escaped.

 8                  The Governor's proposal would lock in 

 9           the inadequate $15 minimum wage by 

10           implementing just tiny increases averaging 

11           about 40 cents a year.  What that means is 

12           under the Governor's proposal, by 2027, 

13           New York's minimum wage would still be only 

14           $16 and change.

15                  By contrast, Table 2 in my testimony 

16           shows what minimum wages will look like in 

17           other high-cost places in the country by 

18           then.  They will be in the 20 to $21 range in 

19           many high-cost cities, including Seattle, 

20           Washington, D.C., Denver, Colorado, and 

21           others.

22                  Moreover, other high-cost states such 

23           as Massachusetts, Vermont and California are 

24           proposing increases in the $20 range.  The 


                                                                   227

 1           Raise the Wage Act would bring New York's 

 2           wage in line with those similar high-cost 

 3           places.  The Governor's proposal would leave 

 4           it $4 or $5 an hour lower than these other 

 5           high-cost regions.  Fresno, California, and 

 6           Yakima, Washington, would have higher minimum 

 7           wages than New York under the Governor's 

 8           proposal.  

 9                  Even worse, her proposal would not 

10           even ensure that New York's wage keeps up 

11           with inflation going forward.  That's because 

12           she has capped increases at just 3 percent.  

13           In the very first year, inflation will be 

14           6 percent.  Be happy to go into other details 

15           of how her indexing proposal is far out of 

16           line with what, you know, the majority of the 

17           other states use.

18                  There's a lot of research that has 

19           shown that the $15 minimum wage didn't hurt 

20           jobs.  And finally, today they rolled out a 

21           coalition of more than 200 businesses 

22           statewide, in all regions of the state, 

23           backing the $21 Raise the Wage Act.  They 

24           span from Western New York to Long Island 


                                                                   228

 1           to --

 2                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  I have to cut you 

 3           off, Paul.  Sorry.

 4                  MR. SONN:  Thank you.

 5                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

 6                  MR. SONN:  Thank you.

 7                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Certainly.

 8                  Good evening.

 9                  MR. BARAN:  Good evening.  

10                  Can you hear me or -- can you hear me 

11           now?  Yes, okay.  

12                  Thank you to Chairs Krueger, 

13           Weinstein, Joyner, Ramos and the entire 

14           committee for the opportunity to testify 

15           today.  My name is Hugh Baran.  I'm an 

16           attorney at Kakalec Law, a workers' rights 

17           law firm based in Brooklyn and serving 

18           workers across the state.

19                  I'm here to testify about why 

20           Assemblymember Joyner and Senator Hoylman's 

21           EmPIRE Worker Protection Act, A1893/S541, 

22           needs to be included in the budget as a 

23           revenue-raiser that would contribute close to 

24           $30 million annually to the DOL's budget, 


                                                                   229

 1           allowing the agency to hire more 

 2           investigators and enforcers for years to 

 3           come, to address our state's wage-theft 

 4           crisis.  

 5                  Employers steal $3 billion every year 

 6           from New York workers.  This theft 

 7           disproportionately affects Black, Latinx, 

 8           immigrant workers and other workers of color 

 9           who are disproportionately represented in 

10           high-violation industry jobs.  We've always 

11           depended on a combination of private and 

12           public enforcement to address this wage theft 

13           and other violations of the Labor Law.

14                  Despite new protections that have been 

15           enacted by the Legislature, several trends 

16           are jeopardizing New York workers' ability to 

17           exercise their rights.  On the public 

18           enforcement side, caseloads have risen at 

19           DOL, but staffing levels have declined -- so 

20           much so that DOL has fewer than half the 

21           investigators that it had in the 1960s.  

22                  On the private litigation side, 

23           increased fear of retaliation and other 

24           hurdles have posed obstacles to workers 


                                                                   230

 1           trying to address violations of their rights.

 2                  As you just heard from my colleague 

 3           Paul Sonn, there's been a lot of talk about 

 4           raising the minimum wage in the budget, and 

 5           it appears likely this could be done through 

 6           the budget.  But passing a higher minimum 

 7           wage will be undermined if workers can't 

 8           enforce the minimum wage and wage-theft 

 9           protections that we already have on the 

10           books.

11                  The EmPIRE Act would address the 

12           state's lack of public enforcement capacity 

13           by allowing workers and labor organizations 

14           to stand in the shoes of the state and bring 

15           public enforcement actions seeking civil 

16           penalties, declaratory and injunctive relief 

17           for wage and hour, health and safety, and 

18           retaliation violations.

19                  EmPIRE encourages robust enforcement 

20           of the Labor Law, awarding workers affected 

21           by violations a 40 percent share of civil 

22           penalties recovered, with 60 percent going to 

23           the DOL to fund future public enforcement 

24           efforts in a typical case.


                                                                   231

 1                  The EmPIRE Act does not create any new 

 2           requirements for employers.  It simply 

 3           expands public enforcement of laws that are 

 4           already on the books.  DOL simply does not 

 5           have the resources to address the current 

 6           scale of the wage-theft crisis, and a 

 7           temporary increase in DOL's budget will not 

 8           change this.  

 9                  The act states that civil penalties 

10           recovered for DOL are to be used for 

11           enforcing the Labor Law and are to be 

12           continuously appropriated to supplement and 

13           not supplant the funding to the agency for 

14           those purposes.  This will create a permanent 

15           revenue stream for DOL's enforcement for 

16           years to come.  

17                  In California, PAGA, a law which 

18           inspired EmPIRE, has generated an average of 

19           $67 million per year for that state's 

20           Department of Labor.  It's estimated EmPIRE 

21           would generate close to $30 million per year.  

22           That money can help fund hiring of more 

23           investigators and enforcers for years to 

24           come.


                                                                   232

 1                  Thank you.  Happy to answer any other 

 2           questions about EmPIRE.

 3                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

 4                  Our first questioner is Chair Senator 

 5           Ramos.

 6                  SENATOR RAMOS:  Thank you, Chair 

 7           Krueger.  And welcome, gentlemen.  Great to 

 8           see you all.

 9                  Mr. Baran, I apologize, I'm not going 

10           to be asking you questions, mostly because I 

11           agree with everything you've said.

12                  (Laughter.)

13                  SENATOR RAMOS:  And I do agree with 

14           the other gentlemen, of course, but I would 

15           love for James Parrott to expand a little bit 

16           on actual possible solutions to our UI 

17           situation and how to bring the fund out of 

18           the deficit that it's in, in hopefully about 

19           a minute?

20                  MR. PARROTT:  Yeah.  So as I was 

21           indicating, the main problem is that the 

22           taxable wage base in New York is only 

23           $12,300.  So an employer only pays the UI tax 

24           on the first $12,300 in wages.  


                                                                   233

 1                  New York is the highest-wage state 

 2           overall, so a lot of wages in New York are 

 3           going untaxed.  So effectively you could 

 4           raise the taxable wage base in the 

 5           neighborhood of $50,000 to $60,000, which 

 6           would not make it the highest -- Washington 

 7           State is at $62,000, a half-dozen states are 

 8           around $50,000.

 9                  You raise it to $50,000, you could 

10           generate more revenue, pay off the trust fund 

11           debt in two to three years, lower taxes on 

12           small employers.  New York State has latitude 

13           under federal law to change the emphasis that 

14           experience rating has in the -- in setting 

15           the tax rates.  That could further lower the 

16           tax rates on small employers.

17                  So it's raising the tax rate, 

18           changing -- raising the taxable wage base, 

19           changing the structure, shifting the tax 

20           burden from small employers to large 

21           employers.

22                  SENATOR RAMOS:  Thank you.  And 

23           succinct, I appreciate that, Mr. Parrott.

24                  MR. PARROTT:  Thanks.


                                                                   234

 1                  SENATOR RAMOS:  Mr. Sonn, thank you 

 2           for being here.  

 3                  You know, you worked on the last 

 4           campaign to raise the minimum wage, and I 

 5           think one of the biggest myths that I hear is 

 6           that it will somehow hinder job growth.  But 

 7           we saw the opposite with the last minimum 

 8           wage increase.

 9                  Can you expand on what we can expect?

10                  MR. SONN:  Sure.  There have been a 

11           total -- and our colleague James is the 

12           author of one of them, so he should feel free 

13           to elaborate.  There have been a total of 

14           five separate studies of the impact of 

15           New York's $15 minimum wage.  You know, a 

16           couple -- several by universities, including 

17           James's, also the University of California 

18           and Columbia University, one by the New York 

19           Federal Reserve Bank.  All of them found that 

20           they raised pay for millions, resulted in 

21           significant reductions in poverty, and there 

22           was no evidence of job loss.

23                  This includes upstate.  For example, 

24           the Federal Reserve looked at job growth 


                                                                   235

 1           patterns along the Pennsylvania/New York 

 2           border where the wage differential is about 

 3           $4 or $5 an hour --

 4                  SENATOR RAMOS:  Anything about 

 5           Long Island?  I'm trying to get 

 6           Senator Martins on the bill.

 7                  (Laughter.)

 8                  MR. SONN:  Yes, on Long Island as 

 9           well.  The most significant one was the 

10           recent University of California study which 

11           looked at the impact of the full $15 

12           minimum wage on Long Island and upstate 

13           counties, and it found that job -- it focused 

14           on the fast food minimum wage, which has been 

15           at $15 for several years, long enough to 

16           study.  It found that job growth was equal to 

17           or faster in Long Island and upstate than in 

18           similar counties in other states that had 

19           much lower minimum wages.

20                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Sorry, Paul, I 

21           have to stop you there.

22                  SENATOR RAMOS:  Thank you, Paul.

23                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

24                  Assembly.


                                                                   236

 1                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JOYNER:  Member Lucas.

 2                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LUCAS:  Thank you, 

 3           Madam Chair.

 4                  I think this is for EmPIRE Coalition.

 5                  MR. BARAN:  Yes.

 6                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LUCAS:  You mentioned in 

 7           your testimony that the loss of 3 billion in 

 8           wages that are stolen each year due to 

 9           inadequate enforcement of the Labor Law.

10                  Can you speak to what enforcement 

11           should look like?  As well as what mechanism 

12           as legislators should we have in place to 

13           curtail these types of losses?

14                  MR. BARAN:  Absolutely.  So I think 

15           there's always got to be a combination of 

16           different enforcement mechanisms.  And that's 

17           how the law has always -- our laws under the 

18           federal law, the Fair Labor Standards Act, 

19           and the New York Labor Law, have always 

20           treated it.

21                  But there's going to be public 

22           enforcers like the departments of labor but 

23           also private enforcers, people who are 

24           directly harmed by the violations, bringing 


                                                                   237

 1           lawsuits in court to address these 

 2           violations.

 3                  Part of the problem right now is that 

 4           the -- there isn't a significant enough 

 5           deterrent mechanism for employers because the 

 6           penalties are so low.  You know, even if 

 7           workers get together and bring a claim for 

 8           the violations -- like we, for example, 

 9           represent workers at a paper bag factory 

10           upstate.  The violations, you know, end up 

11           being a couple of minutes a day.  For each 

12           worker, those violations are very 

13           small-dollar.  

14                  And for the employer, at the end of 

15           the day, if they have to pay, it's not 

16           necessarily a lot of money to that employer.  

17           They pay that money that they stole plus an 

18           equal amount is liquidated damages.  And it 

19           ends up being very little to deter the 

20           violation.  And so a lot of violations go 

21           undetected and unabated.

22                  The EmPIRE Act, if it's enacted, would 

23           create a new default civil penalty of $500 

24           per pay period per worker per violation.  


                                                                   238

 1           From that penalty, 40 percent would go to the 

 2           workers who are affected by the violations 

 3           and 60 percent would go to the Department of 

 4           Labor to fund future enforcement.  

 5                  And in California, where they have 

 6           this similar law, those penalties have helped 

 7           start new enforcement initiatives and fund 

 8           new enforcement initiatives, in particular to 

 9           address independent contractor 

10           misclassification.

11                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LUCAS:  Thank you for 

12           that.

13                  MR. BARAN:  You're welcome.

14                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

15                  Oh, do you have more?  I'm sorry, you 

16           have a few more seconds if you wish.

17                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LUCAS:  No, I'm okay.

18                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  I didn't want to 

19           cut you off.

20                  Okay, Senator Martins.

21                  SENATOR MARTINS:  Thank you.

22                  It's good to see you again.  It's been 

23           a few years.

24                  MR. PARROTT:  Yup.


                                                                   239

 1                  SENATOR MARTINS:  You know, I do have 

 2           some concerns.  I've heard from constituents 

 3           back home that every time they go to the 

 4           supermarket the price of things is higher.  

 5           It just costs more.  And, you know, it's not 

 6           due to anything we've done.  Certainly 

 7           there's inflation nationally, and they're 

 8           seeing the impacts of those -- that inflation 

 9           reflected in their ability to purchase 

10           everyday items.

11                  There is a concern that increasing 

12           minimum wage will add to an inflationary 

13           cycle and add to costs to basic goods to 

14           people who are looking to purchase, and will 

15           impact those, especially those on fixed 

16           incomes who are unable to absorb that.

17                  And so I was curious if you can give 

18           us your insights, whether you relate back to 

19           the minimum wage increase that was done just 

20           a few years ago or whether you have 

21           independent insights of that.  For those who 

22           are concerned about an increase and how it's 

23           going to impact those who are least able to 

24           pay, what say you?


                                                                   240

 1                  MR. PARROTT:  Well, I can start and 

 2           Paul can supplement this.

 3                  Look at our experience when we raised 

 4           the -- when we phased in the $15 minimum wage 

 5           in New York City.  So the minimum wage 

 6           basically doubled between 2014 and 2019.  

 7           There was no noticeable inflation at that 

 8           time in New York.  

 9                  The recent inflation we've had is very 

10           unusual.  You know, it's due to a combination 

11           of factors, none of which are related to what 

12           people might call wage push inflation -- 

13           wages rising, leading businesses to raise 

14           prices.  The inflation we've seen is due to 

15           supply chain problems related to the 

16           pandemic, the Russian war in Ukraine and the 

17           effect that that's had on oil prices and 

18           grain prices and food prices around the 

19           country.  

20                  Plus, you know, there's a recent 

21           report from the Federal Reserve Bank of 

22           Cleveland that found that corporate pricing 

23           power was responsible for half of the 

24           inflation recently, which just added to 


                                                                   241

 1           profits.

 2                  So none of the research about the 

 3           recent inflation -- or our own experience in 

 4           New York when we raised the minimum wage to 

 5           $15 -- points to an effect on minimum wage 

 6           increases leading to inflation.

 7                  MR. SONN:  So it really is not a 

 8           driver of inflation, but it's a vital 

 9           response to inflation.  Because inflation is 

10           eroding consumers' and workers' purchasing 

11           power in their -- you know, you just have to 

12           go to the grocery store or the gas pump and 

13           you can see how everything is costing a lot 

14           more.  

15                  And the Governor's very small proposal 

16           is just not enough to help to catch paychecks 

17           up to where they need to be.

18                  SENATOR MARTINS:  Thank you.

19                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

20                  Assembly.

21                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JOYNER:  Member Simon.

22                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN SIMON:  Here we go.  

23           Thank you.  

24                  Thank you, Mr. Parrott.  I always 


                                                                   242

 1           enjoy hearing from you and your expert 

 2           advice.  You were once in my neighborhood on 

 3           an issue --

 4                  MR. PARROTT:  We're well-represented 

 5           in the Assembly.

 6                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN SIMON:  So I think this 

 7           sounds like a great idea.

 8                  But I wanted to also speak to 

 9           Mr. Baran about the EmPIRE whatever Act -- 

10           sorry.  And I just -- for a matter of the 

11           record alone.

12                  So you're essentially raising the 

13           penalties and you're empowering individual 

14           attorneys or not-for-profit public interest 

15           law firms, for example, to in fact act as the 

16           Department of Labor, get those penalties, and 

17           they would be empowered to bring an action 

18           for declaratory relief penalties, injunctive 

19           relief, but not damages.  Is that correct?

20                  MR. BARAN:  That's correct.

21                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN SIMON:  Okay.  So 

22           this -- we're not talking about mental 

23           distress or other kinds of damages that are 

24           usually the kinds of things people are 


                                                                   243

 1           worried about in terms of the, you know -- 

 2           what is the -- the opening-the-floodgates 

 3           kind of thing.  So this really is going to be 

 4           limited in terms of the kind of remedies that 

 5           you can get that would directly then help New 

 6           York State as well as help those workers who 

 7           would get a cut of that.  

 8                  Is that correct?

 9                  MR. BARAN:  Correct.

10                  And so where the Labor Law already 

11           provides for a civil penalty, that is the 

12           civil penalty that would apply.  Most of the 

13           Labor Law provisions do not provide for that 

14           kind of civil penalty.  And so there would be 

15           a new default penalty that would apply in 

16           these actions of $500 per worker per pay 

17           period per violation.

18                  So it's very predictable and clear 

19           what the costs of stealing wages or 

20           committing other violations of the Labor Law 

21           are, and part of our hope is that it will 

22           actually deter those violations from 

23           happening in the first place.

24                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN SIMON:  We have passed a 


                                                                   244

 1           couple of bills that are about wage theft.  I 

 2           had passed a wage-theft law last year; there 

 3           have been others.  Why are they not 

 4           sufficient for this purpose?

 5                  MR. BARAN:  So there's a combination 

 6           of reasons.  One is -- there's definitely a 

 7           combination of reasons.  Part of the -- on 

 8           the private enforcement side is there's a 

 9           real increased fear of retaliation among 

10           workers, particularly immigrant workers in 

11           the current anti-immigrant climate that we're 

12           facing.  That's one big problem.

13                  The other problem is just various 

14           obstacles to privately enforcing your rights 

15           in court, and to banding together to enforce 

16           rights in court.  You know, some of those are 

17           obstacles that we've seen from the 

18           Supreme Court and bad decisions in case law 

19           there.  But they're not only limited to that.  

20                  And in general -- particularly a lot 

21           of these wage-theft cases involve 

22           small-dollar violations.  And frankly, for 

23           attorneys like me, a lot of those kinds of 

24           violations just simply aren't big enough to 


                                                                   245

 1           be able to have an incentive to pursue.

 2                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN SIMON:  Hard to find 

 3           counsel.

 4                  MR. BARAN:  And so when you have --

 5                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  I'm sorry, I have 

 6           to cut you off.  Thank you.

 7                  Senator Robert Jackson.

 8                  SENATOR JACKSON:  Am I to close?  No.

 9                  But thank you for coming and speaking 

10           out.

11                  Paul, I want to ask you what -- can 

12           you talk about the impact of the Governor's 

13           proposal on home care workers and the 

14           vulnerable population that they serve?

15                  MR. SONN:  Yeah, it was really quite 

16           surprising that the Governor, having just 

17           negotiated 10 months ago this important $3 an 

18           hour wage premium for home care workers, that 

19           she's now proposing to freeze it and phase it 

20           out.  

21                  And, you know, I think every -- the 

22           rationale for that policy was that home care 

23           work is so demanding that it needs to pay 

24           above minimum wage in order to be able to 


                                                                   246

 1           adequately recruit a workforce, you know, in 

 2           light of our urgent home care labor shortage.  

 3           So the policy needs to be kept permanently 

 4           above minimum wage.

 5                  And so Senator Ramos and 

 6           Assemblymember Joyner's Raise the Wage Act 

 7           would do that.  It would preserve the 

 8           $3 increment.  It would modify it so that as 

 9           the minimum wage goes up, the home care wage 

10           would remain $3 above the general minimum 

11           wage, preserving that important incentive.  

12                  The Governor, though, is proposing to 

13           strip that away, and it's really puzzling and 

14           really, you know, kind of counterproductive.  

15           And with respect, we would urge the 

16           Legislature to preserve that important gain 

17           for home care workers and build on it with 

18           the Raise the Wage Act.

19                  SENATOR JACKSON:  And so it will be up 

20           to us in order to pass the law and, if she 

21           vetoes it, to override the veto.

22                  MR. SONN:  I don't think -- she 

23           proposed modifying the law from last year.  

24           The law as is is written to keep the home 


                                                                   247

 1           care wage $3 above the minimum wage.  So that 

 2           includes the minimum wage phased up to $21 

 3           under the Raise the Wage Act.  So as long as 

 4           you do not accept the Governor's amendments 

 5           that were included in her budget proposal, 

 6           the $3 increment will stand.

 7                  But you obviously need to be very 

 8           clear on that.

 9                  SENATOR JACKSON:  And Jim, what do we 

10           need to do from a legislative point of view 

11           in order to basically raise the revenue in 

12           order to help reduce the time frame to pay 

13           back the money for the unemployment?  I mean, 

14           do we have the heart to do that? 

15                  MR. PARROTT:  You know, other states 

16           change their taxable wage base all the time.  

17           New York seems to have a really hard time 

18           addressing its unemployment insurance 

19           problem.  It wasn't addressed from 2000 until 

20           2014, and then the proposal was so flawed 

21           that many of us were skeptical that the -- 

22           you know, that it would effectively prevent 

23           the trust fund from going into debt the next 

24           recession.  The trust fund lasted two weeks 


                                                                   248

 1           this time before New York had to start 

 2           borrowing.

 3                  You write legislation that changes the 

 4           UI tax structure.  That's at the discretion 

 5           of New York State.  You have to be in 

 6           compliance with federal guidelines on that.  

 7           New York has a fair amount of latitude.  

 8           Other states have much higher taxable wages 

 9           bases.  

10                  We can change the taxable wage base in 

11           the structure and project out what that would 

12           do to the trust fund balance.  And that 

13           likely would allow for an acceleration of 

14           repaying the debt and increasing benefits.  

15           because our benefits are really -- they're 

16           below mediocre.

17                  SENATOR JACKSON:  And we call 

18           ourselves the Empire State.

19                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  I have to cut you 

20           off, Robert.  Sorry. 

21                  Assembly.

22                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JOYNER:  Okay.  Thank 

23           you to the panel for your insight on all of 

24           the proposals that you brought up.


                                                                   249

 1                  I had a couple of questions for Hugh.  

 2           The EmPIRE Act is currently not in the 

 3           proposal, the Governor's budget proposal.  So 

 4           can you talk a little bit more about this 

 5           $30 million that could potentially be a 

 6           revenue-raiser?  How many jobs do you 

 7           estimate DOL could see from this?

 8                  MR. BARAN:  Yes, so in California the 

 9           PAGA, which is the law that inspired EmPIRE, 

10           has generated an average of $67 million per 

11           year from 2016 to 2021.  And so our estimate 

12           of $30 million per year is sort of accounting 

13           for New York's just a smaller state than 

14           California and there's fewer -- obviously 

15           there's fewer workers as a result.

16                  But we do think that once attorneys 

17           have become familiar with how to use EmPIRE, 

18           that it's going to generate a lot of revenue, 

19           and potentially more.  It might -- we 

20           actually think we've run a fairly 

21           conservative estimate.  

22                  In terms of jobs, I mean, what we've 

23           seen in California is it's actually enabled 

24           the hiring of a lot of new people into their 


                                                                   250

 1           state DOL.  You know, first there were 

 2           people -- part of the way the EmPIRE Act 

 3           works is that you have to file a claim, a 

 4           notice of claim with the Department of Labor.  

 5           So there will be people at the department 

 6           reviewing those notices as an initial matter 

 7           that will help sort of spur other 

 8           investigation efforts.  Those are jobs that 

 9           will be created.

10                  In addition, then once the revenue 

11           starts coming in from EmPIRE actions, we 

12           think there could be dozens of new 

13           investigators and enforcers who are hired.  I 

14           don't have exact numbers at my fingertips; 

15           I'm happy to get that to you if you like.  

16                  But I think what's really important 

17           about this is it's a permanent revenue 

18           stream.  It's not something that would vary 

19           year to year based on a budget.  It's money 

20           that's going to come in every year from these 

21           EmPIRE actions, and it will be protected to 

22           be used for these enforcement purposes.

23                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JOYNER:  Okay, great.

24                  And my remaining two questions are for 


                                                                   251

 1           the remaining panelists.  The Governor's 

 2           proposal has a 3 percent cap on minimum wage 

 3           indexing.  Can you talk a little bit about 

 4           what the impact will be to workers?

 5                  And then I know, James, you spoke 

 6           about the taxable wage base.  I think you 

 7           said 12,000, right?  It's currently at 

 8           $12,000?

 9                  MR. PARROTT:  Twelve thousand three 

10           hundred currently, right.

11                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JOYNER:  And if you 

12           could speak -- if we change that, what would 

13           the impact be on businesses and employers as 

14           well?

15                  MR. SONN:  The Governor's proposal to 

16           cap inflation adjustments at 3 percent would 

17           mean that not only would workers' minimum 

18           wage not catch up for the past inflation 

19           since 2019, but it wouldn't even keep up with 

20           inflation in the future.  Because this very 

21           first year, inflation is supposed to be close 

22           to 6 percent.  She would authorize only a 

23           3 percent increase.  So New York's minimum 

24           wage will continue to erode.


                                                                   252

 1                  Of the 19 other states that adjust 

 2           their minimum wage for inflation, 16 have no 

 3           caps or limits.  It hasn't resulted in 

 4           unmanageably high minimum wage increases, 

 5           including during the past years of high 

 6           inflation.  They're just completely 

 7           unnecessary and unfair, and they should be 

 8           rejected.

 9                  Also, almost no other states have 

10           the -- she would automatically suspend 

11           increases whenever unemployment ticks up.  

12           Virtually no other states do that.  And that 

13           should be rejected as well.

14                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

15                  Okay, I think I might be the last 

16           Senator.

17                  So James, I read your report, and I 

18           completely agree that New York should have 

19           done this years ago, and we haven't.  And I 

20           think, following up on where I had to cut off 

21           Senator Jackson before, so some of us are 

22           worried we're going to hit a new recession in 

23           not that long, and we're going to need to 

24           deal with unemployment benefits again.


                                                                   253

 1                  How quickly could we implement the 

 2           changes you're making recommendations that we 

 3           should do, so that come the next time we 

 4           actually have a more reasonable benefit level 

 5           for unemployed workers?  Because I'm not 

 6           counting on the federal government coming to 

 7           give us more benefits again.

 8                  MR. PARROTT:  Yeah.  Right.  I think 

 9           that's a reasonable thing to not assume.

10                  Well, I doubt that you could rewrite 

11           the tax structure by the end of the month and 

12           put it in this budget.  But, you know --

13                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  But soon after.

14                  MR. PARROTT:  I'll help, if you -- you 

15           know, if there's interest in doing that.

16                  I did meet with the UI specialist at 

17           the Labor Department last week to review this 

18           proposal, because I wanted to make sure that 

19           they didn't see any legal reason why New York 

20           State couldn't do that.  I didn't hear any 

21           objections on those grounds.

22                  They did say, however, that because of 

23           this computer system, which is not yet fully 

24           modernized, that you couldn't implement a new 


                                                                   254

 1           system, including the tax structure part of 

 2           it, until the new system is in place.  So -- 

 3           but hopefully it will be done by the end of 

 4           the calendar year -- I think that's what the 

 5           commissioner was saying -- so that 

 6           conceivably it could be in place a year from 

 7           now.

 8                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  So it could be in 

 9           place by the end of '23, is that what you're 

10           saying?  '24?

11                  MR. PARROTT:  Well, the end of '23 -- 

12           I mean, it's mainly a function of the 

13           computer system.

14                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Right.

15                  MR. PARROTT:  You would have to -- you 

16           would have to, you know, decide the best way 

17           to reconfigure the tax structure, the 

18           combination of taxable wage base and what you 

19           want to do about experience rating and so on.

20                  None of that is -- you know, it's not, 

21           so to speak, rocket science to do that.  You 

22           just have to figure it out.

23                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  But we have other 

24           states to look at for the models, right?  


                                                                   255

 1           It's not like we're starting from scratch.

 2                  MR. PARROTT:  Oh, absolutely.  

 3           Absolutely, right.

 4                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  So it's not that 

 5           hard to steal good ideas from other states.

 6                  MR. PARROTT:  Right.

 7                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Right?

 8                  MR. PARROTT:  Yup.

 9                  MR. SONN:  Hundred percent.

10                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Okay -- no, I 

11           don't have enough time to start another 

12           question.  So I want to just thank all of you 

13           for your good work.

14                  Is there another Assemblymember?

15                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JOYNER:  No.

16                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  And we have no 

17           other Senators.  I know you want seconds and 

18           thirds, but we're not letting you do that.

19                  So with that, I want to thank you all 

20           very much for participating and waiting all 

21           day to testify before us.

22                  MR. BARAN:  Thank you.

23                  MR. SONN:  Thank you.

24                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  I want to ask you 


                                                                   256

 1           or excuse you to leave or go back to your 

 2           seats. 

 3                  And I'm going to call up the next and 

 4           actually now it will be the final panel:  

 5           Make the Road New York, New York Communities 

 6           for Change, and ALIGN.  And I'm also going to 

 7           ask to come up at the same time No. 16, the 

 8           New York State Climate Education and Green 

 9           Energy Careers, because Nos. 14 and 15 both 

10           were not able to join us.  Okay?  And it just 

11           seems silly to do three and then one.  

12                  Okay?  Thank you.  So I see three, I'm 

13           hoping for four.  Oh, they're coming, they're 

14           waving.  No problem.  Don't rush.

15                  (Discussion off the record with 

16           Mr. Flint, Speaker No. 16.)

17                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  We're all a very 

18           civilized group.  Last night we had 

19           pro-tobacco and anti-tobacco people at the 

20           same table at the same time.

21                  (Laughter.)

22                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Okay, I purposely 

23           set it up that way.  But, you know, it was a 

24           long day.  Sorry.  And it was a health 


                                                                   257

 1           committee -- Health hearing.

 2                  Okay, hi, everyone.  I'll start with 

 3           my right, your left.  So please just 

 4           introduce yourself and start for your 

 5           three minutes.

 6                  TAL FRIEDEN:  Thank you, honorable 

 7           chairs and committee members.  My name is 

 8           Tal Frieden.  I work at ALIGN as the campaign 

 9           coordinator for Raise Up New York.  

10                  Raise Up New York has built a powerful 

11           alliance of labor unions, grassroots 

12           organizations and businesses in support of 

13           raising the minimum wage to over $21.25 by 

14           2026, and indexing it annually thereafter. 

15                  ALIGN was active in the Fight for 15, 

16           as were many of the members of the Raise Up 

17           New York coalition, who together represent 

18           almost 1.3 million workers across New York 

19           State.  

20                  The Raise the Wage Act is also 

21           supported by New York Business for a Fair 

22           Minimum Wage, a growing coalition of over 200 

23           businesses and business organizations across 

24           New York, from retailers, restaurants and 


                                                                   258

 1           other small businesses to farms, 

 2           manufacturers, and more.

 3                  Our coalition members are UAW workers 

 4           manufacturing Ford F150s in Buffalo, 

 5           farmworkers harvesting our food in the 

 6           Finger Lakes region.  They're home care 

 7           workers in the Hudson Valley, providing 

 8           essential care to those who need it.

 9                  Raise Up New York represents fast food 

10           workers across the state, 32BJ airport 

11           workers at some of the busiest airports in 

12           America, and UPS Teamsters in Long Island, 

13           who provide the logistics infrastructure that 

14           keeps our economy running.  These are the 

15           workers who will see a direct impact in their 

16           wallets when we raise the minimum wage.

17                  According to the Economic Progress 

18           Institute, under Senate Bill 1978A and 

19           Assembly Bill 2204A, 2.9 million workers 

20           would receive an average raise of $63 per 

21           week.  This increase of over $3,300 per year 

22           could mean the difference between eating and 

23           heating, between a stable home and housing 

24           insecurity, or between childcare and missing 


                                                                   259

 1           work.

 2                  Governor Hochul has put forward a 

 3           modest proposal to index the minimum wage 

 4           starting at $15 an hour, with caps and 

 5           exceptions that limit the impact of this 

 6           measure.  While it is important that the 

 7           Governor has recognized that we need to raise 

 8           the minimum wage, her proposal has serious 

 9           faults.  Namely, it does not first raise the 

10           minimum wage, an essential element of 

11           restoring the minimum wage's power lost due 

12           to rising prices. 

13                  Under the Governor's proposal, 900,000 

14           workers would get an average raise of $13 per 

15           week.  Again, under the Raise the Wage Act, 

16           2.9 million workers, or a third of New York 

17           State's workforce, would get an average raise 

18           of $63 per week.  The Governor's proposal 

19           leaves out 2 million workers and gives those 

20           who do get a raise barely enough for a 

21           sandwich in New York City.

22                  Moreover, the Governor funds her 

23           proposal by reversing the historic raise that 

24           the Legislature granted essential home care 


                                                                   260

 1           workers last year, ensuring that they would 

 2           return to minimum wage work around the year 

 3           2030 when the minimum wage would finally 

 4           reach $18 an hour under her proposal.  

 5                  New York should not cut benefits for 

 6           some workers in order to pay for raises for 

 7           others.  All workers need an immediate 

 8           increase in the minimum wage.  

 9                  This policy is incredibly popular.  

10           Eighty percent of voters -- Democrats, 

11           Republicans, independents -- support it, and 

12           70 percent think the minimum wage should be 

13           over $20 an hour.

14                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.  I 

15           have to cut you off there.

16                  TAL FRIEDEN:  Thanks.

17                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Next?

18                  MS. SOLIS:  Good evening.  Thank you 

19           for sticking it out with us.  My name is 

20           Angeles Solis.  I'm with Make the Road 

21           New York.  I represent here 24,000 workers, 

22           immigrants and tenants fighting for 

23           protections in their community.

24                  And I'm here to testify for a critical 


                                                                   261

 1           piece of legislation carried by Labor Chair 

 2           Senator Ramos and Assemblymember Karines 

 3           Reyes, the Unemployment Bridge Program, S3192 

 4           and A4825.  This legislation is a solution to 

 5           a structural problem, and that is exclusion 

 6           in unemployment insurance, which we've talked 

 7           a lot about today.  

 8                  Unemployment insurance is more than a 

 9           benefit, it is an essential labor right.  

10           When losing your job means losing everything, 

11           workers are less likely to speak up in 

12           dangerous conditions.  This is something I 

13           see and our members see every single day.  

14           This was the case for Juan Chonillo, an 

15           NYCC {ph} member who lost their life on a 

16           Manhattan construction site and we honored 

17           earlier this year.  Safety nets are a matter 

18           of life and death.

19                  The UBP, or the Unemployment Bridge 

20           Program, is a solution for over 750,000 

21           New Yorkers ineligible for traditional UI.  

22           Freelancers, undocumented workers, people on 

23           reentry and those in the cash economy would 

24           be covered for up to $1200 a month for up to 


                                                                   262

 1           six months.  We're talking about $1200.  This 

 2           is not a luxury, this is basic needs support.

 3                  So let's talk quick numbers, because 

 4           I've got a minute.  Research shows that for 

 5           every dollar provided in unemployment 

 6           compensation, recipients generate $1.93 right 

 7           back into the economy.  Undocumented 

 8           immigrants paid 1.4 billion over the last 

 9           decade directly into UI.  So they subsidize 

10           this benefit for other workers, but they're 

11           excluded themselves.

12                  Freelancers are a growing part of our 

13           economy.  It's an exploding sector in our 

14           workforce.  And nearly 60 percent of them say 

15           that they will likely do this work in the 

16           future.  These are in your districts, meaning 

17           these workers lack protection without the 

18           UBP.  

19                  Incarcerated workers make the very 

20           furniture we sit on, to license plates, to 

21           hand sanitizer in New York for pennies an 

22           hour, but when released are denied UI.  With 

23           the UBP we can improve public safety, greatly 

24           reduce recidivism, and save the costs of 


                                                                   263

 1           incarceration in New York State.  Quick 

 2           number there:  Recidivism can cost $50,000 

 3           per year per person for someone in reentry, 

 4           while UBP would cost a maximum of 7200 per 

 5           person.

 6                  So there's a strong economic argument 

 7           here of a spending boost.  We can expect 

 8           250 million back to New York City alone, 

 9           43 million back to Long Island, the Hudson 

10           Valley and other regions across New York 

11           State.  

12                  Five hundred million is what it would 

13           cost.  That includes 15 percent for the 

14           Department of Labor.  And it would be funded 

15           through the digital ad tax, which generates 

16           over a billion for New York State alone.  

17                  And in my last 16 seconds I'll just 

18           say that if the Legislature was able to 

19           justify 455 million for beautification 

20           projects like the Belmont State Track, the 

21           Legislature can also justify the same amount 

22           of resources to cover all workers that make 

23           those projects run, including the labor of 

24           excluded workers.  So we're counting on you 


                                                                   264

 1           to bring this program home and to remedy the 

 2           exclusions in our social safety net.

 3                  Thank you.

 4                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

 5                  Next up?

 6                  MR. SANCHEZ:  Hi, good evening.

 7                  My name is Lucas Sanchez.  I'm the 

 8           co-executive director of New York Communities 

 9           for Change.  We're a community-based 

10           organization representing around 

11           20,000 members in New York City and on 

12           Long Island.

13                  I'm also here as a member of the Fund 

14           Excluded Workers Coalition, the Raise Up 

15           New York Coalition, and the EmPIRE Act 

16           Coalition.  

17                  On a personal level, I'm also here on 

18           behalf of immigrants like me and my family.  

19           I came here in the late eighties as an 

20           undocumented immigrant.  My family, my aunts, 

21           my uncles, family friends, everyone I grew up 

22           with, were undocumented immigrants from 

23           Colombia.  And the legislation I'm going to 

24           talk about is legislation that would have 


                                                                   265

 1           impacted family members like me and millions 

 2           of other folks that have arrived in similar 

 3           ways.

 4                  Again, thank you so much for the 

 5           opportunity to testify.  I want to talk about 

 6           three important pieces of legislation:  The 

 7           Unemployment Bridge program, sponsored by 

 8           Senator Ramos and Assemblymember Reyes; 

 9           Senator Ramos and Assemblymember Joyner's 

10           bill to raise the minimum wage; and 

11           Senator Hoylman-Sigal and Assemblymember 

12           Joyner's bill, the EmPIRE Act, Empowering 

13           People in Rights Enforcement.  

14                  So the UBP, the Unemployment Bridge 

15           Program, would provide unemployment insurance 

16           to 750,000 workers excluded from traditional 

17           insurance, with 30,000 people expected to get 

18           benefits at any given time, and would work 

19           similarly to traditional unemployment.  

20                  The UBP is a lifeline for the 

21           self-employed.  It is also about carceral 

22           justice and a public safety issue.  Twenty 

23           thousand workers reentering the labor force 

24           after prison or detention would be covered 


                                                                   266

 1           during their first year post-release.  

 2                  If we want to tackle public safety, if 

 3           we want to tackle the root causes of public 

 4           safety, this is something that will help us 

 5           with that.  It's also an immigrant justice 

 6           issue.  Immigrant workers pay over 

 7           100 million a year into the unemployment 

 8           insurance system in New York, but cannot 

 9           access a cent.

10                  Again, this is a racial and economic 

11           justice issue.  Black and brown workers are 

12           disproportionately impacted by 

13           unemployment -- with, for example, Black 

14           unemployment rates typically running nearly 

15           twice as high as the rate for white workers.

16                  For the second piece of legislation we 

17           support, we must raise the minimum wage in 

18           New York.  I think it's clear to everyone 

19           that $15 an hour is not sufficient to make 

20           ends meet anywhere across the state, and it 

21           is just impossible to survive.  And we must 

22           raise the minimum wage.

23                  As for the EmPIRE Act, this will 

24           really expand the state's enforcement 


                                                                   267

 1           capacity and deter wage theft by creating a 

 2           mechanism that will allow workers in labor 

 3           organizations to step into the shoes of the 

 4           state and file claims for violation of the 

 5           law.

 6                  We are counting on you, our elected 

 7           officials, to bring this legislation home and 

 8           to really help all workers across New York 

 9           State.  Thank you.

10                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

11                  Excuse me.  Hi.  And you were, again?  

12           You were for the -- I know this --

13                  MR. FLINT:  It has to be too long, 

14           doesn't it?

15                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  -- Climate 

16           Education and Clean Energy careers.  

17                  I'm sorry, Adam, yes.

18                  MR. FLINT:  Well, I just want to thank 

19           you, Senator Krueger, and Chairs Ramos and 

20           Joyner and the remainder of you who have just 

21           amazing stamina.  I don't think I could pull 

22           that off.

23                  So I'm Adam Flint, and I wear a number 

24           of hats.  But I'm here today representing a 


                                                                   268

 1           working group with a very long name, climate 

 2           education and clean energy careers.  I've 

 3           been in this space since the first year of 

 4           Green Jobs, Green New York.  And I've also 

 5           co-led a consortium that designed NYSERDA's 

 6           new $53 million Regional Clean Energy Hub 

 7           program.  And a lot of this draws on that 

 8           experience.

 9                  The proposals in my testimony, my 

10           written testimony, most of them are in the 

11           New York Renews "Climate and Community 

12           Protection Plan," which I don't know that has 

13           been formally introduced yet, but it will be 

14           hopefully soon.  The working group that I 

15           represent included or includes a number of 

16           organizations from across the state:  

17           Educators, workforce professionals, labor, 

18           community-based organizations -- including 

19           ALIGN, our neighbors to the left -- NYATEP, 

20           New York Renews, UUP and so forth.

21                  We convened because we saw a critical 

22           gap in state policy and programs that we 

23           really need to fill in order to build the 

24           21st-century workforce in an equitable way 


                                                                   269

 1           that is required to meet our ambitious CLCPA 

 2           goals.  To put it bluntly, not only does the 

 3           state lack a plan with resources to meet this 

 4           challenge, but it also lacks any official 

 5           space in which to create such a plan.

 6                  And so our first proposal is to fund a 

 7           working group, interagency plus stakeholders 

 8           working group, to do the job that 

 9           unfortunately was not done at any point in 

10           the CLCPA.

11                  In terms of the Governor's budget and 

12           NYSERDA, funds are too few and, perhaps more 

13           importantly, are not appropriately designed 

14           for the needs of this sector.  They tend to 

15           favor larger, already successful groups with 

16           a lot of resources.  Groups that don't meet 

17           those conditions often just won't qualify or 

18           can't practically use the money.

19                  The Governor's own Strategic Workforce 

20           Development Office fund, if I'm reading 

21           things right, was zeroed out for this year, 

22           even though there's funding for future 

23           outyears.  That fund would need to be 

24           reconfigured as well.


                                                                   270

 1                  We don't anticipate federal funding 

 2           from any source to do anything differently.  

 3           I spoke to the seniormost official in this 

 4           area in DOE, and if you're not doing formal 

 5           apprenticeships, there's not going to be a 

 6           lot of money.

 7                  The CLCPA -- sorry.  We need this 

 8           funded group of folks to do the work of 

 9           putting together a proposal, and we need for 

10           the various agencies involved to have a more 

11           nuanced and comprehensive plan to cover the 

12           entire State of New York and all of its 

13           citizens.

14                  Thank you.

15                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

16                  I think our first questioner is 

17           Senator Ramos.

18                  SENATOR RAMOS:  Thank you, 

19           Chair Krueger.

20                  Hi, everybody.  Good to see you.  

21           We've had a great day.

22                  Tal, thanks for testifying today.  I'm 

23           wondering if you can expand a little bit 

24           about how this helps -- how raising the 


                                                                   271

 1           minimum wage helps in terms of public safety.  

 2           And maybe a few seconds on more of the 

 3           business support that we've been seeing.

 4                  TAL FRIEDEN:  Sure.  

 5                  So first of all, all of the research 

 6           shows that raising the minimum wage is good 

 7           for small business.  There are countless 

 8           studies -- Paul mentioned this.  We can send 

 9           multiple studies to your offices regarding 

10           the impact on small business.  

11                  Our coalition is over 200 businesses 

12           and growing.  They include farms, 

13           construction, real estate firms, restaurants, 

14           manufacturers, some of the lobbying firms 

15           here in Albany.  It's really across the 

16           gamut, in districts across the state from 

17           Brooklyn to Montauk.  And I can, you know, 

18           quote some of them on their support.

19                  I can also say that James Parrott, who 

20           was here earlier, authored a really important 

21           report that showed that raising the minimum 

22           wage and ensuring living wages does wonders 

23           to ensure thriving communities.  Thriving 

24           communities are communities where folks are 


                                                                   272

 1           not driven to crimes of poverty or other 

 2           types of criminalization that we see in our 

 3           communities.

 4                  So there's research showing that when 

 5           you pay people, it's good for the community.  

 6           It's not hard to understand fundamentally.  

 7           But there's also research to show that as 

 8           well.

 9                  SENATOR RAMOS:  Thank you, Tal.

10                  Angeles, for the Unemployment Bridge 

11           Program that we've introduced this year, can 

12           you talk a little bit about how it would work 

13           in light of the UI deficit that we've been 

14           talking about here?

15                  MS. SOLIS:  Yup.  

16                  So there's a couple of ways to answer 

17           that question.  First, the UBP is needed 

18           because tens of thousands of workers are 

19           excluded from the UI due to federal rules.

20                  Second, we should not sacrifice 

21           safety-net programs as we work to overhaul 

22           all of the issues that we need to fix with 

23           UI.

24                  It is also funded through a different 


                                                                   273

 1           revenue source, so it doesn't actually 

 2           interact with the UI trust fund.  And just on 

 3           the UI trust fund, I believe that 

 4           James Parrott really is the expert here and 

 5           can speak to more.  

 6                  But the problem with the UI system is 

 7           not fraud or employers being overtaxed.  It's 

 8           the chronic insolvency because of the 

 9           irresponsible tax rates and not being able to 

10           keep up over decades.

11                  SENATOR RAMOS:  Thank you, Angeles.  

12           I'm sorry to cut you off.

13                  Lucas, my Colombian parcero, can you 

14           talk a little bit about how the UI benefits 

15           for reentry people work?

16                  MR. SANCHEZ:  Sure.  Thank you, 

17           Senator, for that question.

18                  So although many, many people work 

19           while they are incarcerated or while they are 

20           in immigration detention, this labor is not 

21           recognized as employment and, you know, 

22           cannot be used to establish the necessary 

23           earnings history required for traditional 

24           unemployment insurance.


                                                                   274

 1                  So this program will really provide 

 2           benefits to New Yorkers who haven't had 

 3           access to that.  And again, you know, the 

 4           data is clear that recidivism is very much 

 5           tied to a person's inability to find 

 6           employment, to have an income, and to have 

 7           stable housing.

 8                  SENATOR RAMOS:  Thank you, Lucas.

 9                  Adam, I ran out of time, I'm sorry.  

10           Love your work, though.

11                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Assembly.

12                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JOYNER:  Member 

13           Zinerman.

14                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN ZINERMAN:  Good evening.  

15           thank you all for your really good -- 

16                  {Inaudible interruption.} 

17                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN ZINERMAN:  As you know, 

18           and we're going to make this happen.

19                  My question is for you.  New Yorkers 

20           did a great thing, we passed MRTA and we 

21           passed the Environmental Bond Act.  And so 

22           there's all of these great jobs that you just 

23           talked about that are available where we 

24           don't have a mechanism for how are we going 


                                                                   275

 1           to get those who actually need these jobs -- 

 2           that could help with our unemployment rate 

 3           and other ways -- into these jobs.

 4                  So do you have a figure?  Because I 

 5           don't have your testimony in front of me.  

 6           How much would the working group cost?  And 

 7           then if you could --

 8                  MR. FLINT:  We have a 

 9           back-of-the-envelope figure, I'll be honest, 

10           of about 3 million.

11                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN ZINERMAN:  Three million 

12           dollars.

13                  MR. FLINT:  Yeah.

14                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN ZINERMAN:  And so you're 

15           asking for that to be a part of the one-house 

16           this year in order for the working group to 

17           get started.

18                  (Overtalk.)

19                  MR. FLINT:  Yeah, and part of that is 

20           we want to --

21                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN ZINERMAN:  Is this going 

22           to be a multiyear group?  Or is it --

23                  MR. FLINT:  Oh, yeah.

24                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN ZINERMAN:  Okay, mm-hmm.


                                                                   276

 1                  MR. FLINT:  We want to make sure that 

 2           lack of compensation doesn't limit who can be 

 3           on this committee.

 4                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN ZINERMAN:  Okay, so --

 5                  MR. FLINT:  Which is something NYSERDA 

 6           is already actually doing.  No more 

 7           volunteerism for people who can't afford it.

 8                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN ZINERMAN:  Thank you.

 9                  Oh, I have 1:47.  So let's talk about 

10           you -- you get the working group together.  

11           So just kind of walk us through some 

12           additional steps.  I mean, you -- are you -- 

13           and I think this is the first time we have 

14           one bill that's being proposed where they've 

15           actually named the members of the community 

16           that -- community groups that are already 

17           there working.  Do you have a list of groups 

18           that you want to be a part of this working 

19           group, this interagency working group?

20                  MR. FLINT:  Yeah.  It's not a -- it's 

21           not a complete list.  And we would want to 

22           establish some criteria.  We look a lot at 

23           the same kinds of procedures that have been 

24           used recently in connection with 


                                                                   277

 1           CLCPA-related work with NYSERDA in terms of 

 2           criteria.

 3                  I think part of the reason why we're 

 4           really focusing on this is that we could 

 5           propose, all right, we need this amount of 

 6           money for this particular program.  But we 

 7           know that in order to do anything 

 8           comprehensive, we really need to have 

 9           everybody at the table.  And unfortunately, 

10           because of the way the CLCPA was written, 

11           which in turn was because of who was and 

12           wasn't at that table at the time, we need to 

13           do that.

14                  So, you know, we can say, for example, 

15           the state badly needs to be able to spend 

16           money to market and educate that this is in 

17           fact a growing and established set of careers 

18           that are fantastic careers, very well kept 

19           secret in most places.  Most of the money 

20           does not touch K-12 because it doesn't lead 

21           to very-near-term employment.  We need to do 

22           something about that.  

23                  So there's a whole list of things 

24           we've developed that's in the testimony, but 


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 1           this for us is just the teaser.  We really 

 2           need to do this comprehensively.

 3                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN ZINERMAN:  I note you're 

 4           asking for a carve-out so that the big boys 

 5           don't suck up all the air and all the money 

 6           before the working group comes back with its 

 7           recommendations.  And in three seconds?

 8                  MR. FLINT:  Yes.

 9                  (Laughter.)

10                  MR. FLINT:  I can only say yes or no.

11                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  All right.  

12           Robert Jackson.

13                  SENATOR JACKSON:  So, beautiful 

14           people, let me thank you for hanging in there 

15           and putting forward the advocacy that you do 

16           on behalf of the organizations that you 

17           represent.

18                  And I'm one of those individuals that 

19           I'm sure that I'm on those bills.  And if 

20           not, I will be on them ASAP.  

21                  And just keep pushing in the right 

22           direction in what you're doing in order to 

23           make us do the right thing on behalf of all 

24           of the people that we represent.


                                                                   279

 1                  With that I say to all of you, 

 2           as-salamu alaykum.  Peace be upon all of you.

 3                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Okay, Assembly.

 4                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JOYNER:  Member Lucas.

 5                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LUCAS:  Thank you, 

 6           Madam Chair.

 7                  Okay, this is for New York Communities 

 8           for Change.  In your testimony you mentioned 

 9           Senator Ramos's and Assemblymember Reyes's 

10           bill on the Unemployment Bridge Program, 

11           which will provide unemployment insurance 

12           coverage to 750,000 workers excluded from 

13           traditional insurance.

14                  You mentioned to include a digital ad 

15           tax from companies with gross revenues of 

16           100 million.  What percentage of that tax 

17           would be levied to those companies to 

18           generate the revenue?  Do you have any data 

19           that supports this ask?  And is it adjusted 

20           for inflation?

21                  MR. SANCHEZ:  Sure.  So just to 

22           stress, so the Unemployment Bridge Program 

23           will be revenue-neutral, and the digital tax 

24           is expected to raise a billion dollars for 


                                                                   280

 1           New York State.

 2                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LUCAS:  I'm sorry, can 

 3           you speak into the -- thank you.  

 4                  MR. SANCHEZ:  Sure.  Sorry.

 5                  So just to start again, so I want to 

 6           stress that the Unemployment Bridge Program 

 7           is absolutely revenue-neutral, and the 

 8           digital tax is expected to raise a billion 

 9           dollars for New York State.

10                  To be clear, the tax will collect a 

11           small portion of the annual revenues of 

12           digital advertising services from companies 

13           whose gross and annual revenues from these 

14           services is 100 million or more.  

15                  So in terms of the other specific 

16           questions and the numbers, that is something 

17           that I can definitely get to you.

18                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LUCAS:  Appreciate that.

19                  And is it adjusted for inflation, and 

20           do you have data that supports it?

21                  MS. SOLIS:  On the inflation one, 

22           let's get back to you on that one.

23                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LUCAS:  Okay.

24                  MS. SOLIS:  But there is data.  


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 1                  So there's several states that have 

 2           made a move to pass this ad tax.  And folks 

 3           might be wondering what that is.  It's 

 4           essentially the advertising that is already 

 5           existing out there, bringing in millions if 

 6           not billions of dollars of revenue for major 

 7           tech corporations like Amazon, eBay, Google, 

 8           that they aren't getting taxed on.  Right?  

 9           That's missing revenue for our state.

10                  So -- (indicating timer) the little 

11           peep.  So in Maryland in particular, I do 

12           want to add, they've passed the 

13           first-in-the-nation digital ad tax.  U.S. 

14           Chamber of Commerce, Comcast, Verizon and 

15           industry groups backed by big tech players 

16           like Google and Amazon brought forward two 

17           separate lawsuits.  Now those lawsuits and 

18           those counts have been dismissed in the 

19           federal challenge.  This is, again, new tax 

20           law that we want to bring across the table.

21                  (Unintelligible overtalk.)

22                  MS. SOLIS:  But in terms of data, it 

23           will stand on its feet.

24                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LUCAS:  So I got it, you 


                                                                   282

 1           got support.

 2                  MS. SOLIS:  Sorry.  Yeah, gotcha.

 3                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LUCAS:  This tax 

 4           proposal is actually -- has some similarities 

 5           to the payroll tax that the MTA is seeking to 

 6           get out of its financial bind.  Are you 

 7           concerned -- or what would you say to those 

 8           who would view this as a double taxation on 

 9           companies at a time when businesses are 

10           reducing their workforce by either laying off 

11           employees or imposing hiring freezes?

12                  And could you possibly guarantee that 

13           the revenue projections will actually happen 

14           on this proposed tax?

15                  MS. SOLIS:  Those are good questions.  

16           Again --

17                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  {Mic off.}  You 

18           don't have any time to answer.

19                  MS. SOLIS:  Oh, okay.

20                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  {Mic off.}  You 

21           can write up your answer --

22                  MS. SOLIS:  I'll follow up.

23                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LUCAS:  I appreciate it.  

24           Thank you.


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 1                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  -- and send them 

 2           to us and we'll get them to everyone.  Or you 

 3           can have an offline conversation with the 

 4           Assemblymember in just a few minutes, because 

 5           you're the last panel I'm going to be 

 6           thanking -- {mic on}.  Excuse me.  

 7                  You'll be the last panel I'll be 

 8           thanking during this year's budget hearings, 

 9           because you have the honor and privilege of 

10           being the last panel of the last budget 

11           hearing for '23-'24.  

12                  And I sincerely want to thank all the 

13           legislators who participated during all of 

14           these hearings for three weeks.  I want to 

15           thank all of the staff who worked so hard to 

16           get us here and through these events.  And 

17           that's both houses, both parties, not just 

18           legislative staff, but the staff who makes 

19           sure that we can stay here till sometimes 

20           late at night.  And didn't even get that much 

21           pizza this year, actually.  Overtime, I have 

22           no idea how their pay works, actually.  But 

23           that we can talk about at another time.  

24                  But Helene had to leave a little 


                                                                   284

 1           early, but she wanted to make sure that I 

 2           reference how much we both appreciated 

 3           everyone's participation this year.  We 

 4           barely had to use the gavel once.  

 5                  So really, thank you all for being our 

 6           last panel tonight.  Thank you, everybody 

 7           who's here and has been here.  And I'm 

 8           officially closing down the '23-'24 New York 

 9           State constitutionally required budget 

10           hearings.  

11                  Thank you.

12                  (Applause.)

13                  (Whereupon, at 7:54 p.m., the budget 

14           hearing concluded.)

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